THE TRUE TRAVELS, ADVENTURES, AND OBSERVATIONS OF Captain JOHN SMITH, In Europe, Asia, Africa, and America, from Anno Domini 1593. to 1629. His Accidents and Sea-fights in the straits; his Service and Stratagems of war in Hungaria, Transilvania, Wallachia, and Moldavia, against the Turks, and Tartars; his three single combats betwixt the Christian Army and the Turks. After how he was taken prisoner by the Turks, sold for a Slave, sent into Tartary; his description of the Tartars, their strange manners and customs of Religions, Diets, Buildings, Wars, Feasts, Ceremonies, and Living; how he slew the Bashaw of Nalbrits in Cambia, and escaped from the Turks and Tartars. Together with a continuation of his general History of Virginia, Summer-Iles, New England, and their proceedings, since 1624. to this present 1629; as also of the new Plantations of the great River of the Amazons, the Isles of St. Christopher, Mevis, and Barbados in the West Indies. All written by actual Authors, whose names you shall find along the History. LONDON, Printed by J. H. for Thomas Slater, and are to be sold at the Blue Bible in Green Arbour. 1630. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE, William EARL OF PEMBROKE, Lord Steward of his Majesty's most Honourable Household. Robert EARL OF LINDSEY, Great Chamberlain of ENGLAND. Henry Lord Hunsdon, Viscount Rochfort, Earl of Dover. And all your Honourable Friends and Well-willers. My Lords: SIR Robert Cotton, that most learned Treasurer of Antiquity, having by perusal of my General History, and others, found that I had likewise undergone diverse other as hard hazards in the other parts of the world, requested me to fix the whole course of my passages in a book by itself, whose noble desire I could not but in part satisfy; the rather, because they have acted my fatal Tragedies upon the Stage, and racked my Relations at their pleasure. To prevent therefore all future misprisions, I have compiled this true discourse. Envy hath taxed me to have writ too much, and done too little; but that such should know, how little I esteem them, I have writ this, more for the satisfaction of my friends, and all generous and well disposed Readers: To speak only of myself were intolerable ingratitude; because, having had so many copartners with me; I cannot make a Monument for myself, and leave them unburied in the fields, whose lives begot me the title of a Soldier; for as they were companions with me in my dangers, so shall they be partakers with me in this Tomb. For my Sea Grammar (caused to be printed by my worthy friend, Sir Samuel Saltonstall) hath found such good entertainment abroad, that I have been importuned by many noble persons, to let this also pass the Press. Many of the most eminent Warriors, and others, what their swords did, their penns writ: Though I be never so much their inferior, yet I hold it no great error, to follow good examples; nor repine at them, will do the like. And now my most Honourable good Lords, I know not to whom I may better present it, than to your Lordships, whose friendships, as I conceive, are as much to each others, as my duty is to you all; and because you are acquainted both with my endeavours, and writings, I doubt not, but your honours will as well accept of this, as of the rest, and Patronise it under the shadow of your most noble virtues, which I am ever bound in all duty to reverence, and under which I hope to have shelter, against all storms that dare threaten. Your Honours to be commanded, JOHN SMITH. The Contents of the several Chapters. CHAP. I. HIs birth; apprenticeship; going into France; his beginning with ten shillings and three pence, his service in Netherlands; his bad passage into Scotland; his return to Willoughby; and how he lived in the woods. page 1. Chap. 2. The notable villainy of four French Gallants, and his revenge; Smith thrown overboard, Captain La Roche of Saint Malo relieves him. 3. Chap. 3. A desperate Sea-sight in the straits; his passage to Rome, Naples, and the view of Italy. 5. Chap. 4. The Siege of Olumpagh; an excellent stratagem by Smith; another not much worse. 6. Chap. 5. The siege of Stowlle-Wesenburg; the effects of Smith's Fireworkers; a worthy exploit of the Earl Rosworme; Earl Meldritch takes the Bashaw prisoner. 8. Chap. 6. A brave encounter of the Turks army with the Christians; Duke Mercury overthroweth Assan Bashaw; He divides the Christian army; his nobleness and death. 9 Chap. 7. The unhappy siege of Caniza; Earl Meldritch serveth Prince Sigismundus; Prince Moses besiegeth Regal; Smiths three single combats. 11. Chap. 8. Georgio Busca an Alban his ingratitude to Prince Sigismundus; Prince Moses his Lieutenant, is overthrown by Busca, General for the Emperor Rodulphus; Smiths Patent from Sigismundus, and reward. 14. Chap. 9 Sigismundus sends Ambassadors unto the Emperor; the conditions reassured; he yieldeth up all to Busca, and returneth to Prague. 18. Chap. 10. The Battle of Rottenton; a pretty stratagem of fireworks by Smith. 20. Chap. 11. The names of the English that were slain in the battle of Rottenton; and how Captain Smith was taken prisoner; and sold for a slave. 21. Chap. 12. How Captain Smith was sent prisoner thorough the Black and Dissabacca Sea in Tartary; the description of those Seas, and his usage. 23. Chap. 13. The Turks diet; the Slave's diet; the attire of the Tartars; and manner of Wars and Religions, etc. 24. Chap. 14. The description of the Crym-Tartars; their houses and carts; their idolatry in their lodgings. 26. Chap. 15. Their feasts; common diet; Princes estate; buildings; laws; slaves; entertainment of Ambassadors. 27. Chap. 16. How be levieth an Army; their Arms and Provision; how he divideth the spoil; and his service to the Great Turk. 29. Chap. 17. How Captain Smith escaped his captivity; slew the Bashaw of Nalbrits in Cambia; his passage to Russia, Transilvania, and the midst of Europe to Africa. 31. Chap. 18. The observations of Captain Smith; Mr. Henry Archer, and others in Barbary. 34. Chap. 19 The strange discoveries and observations of the Portugals in Africa. 37. Chap. 20. A brave Sea-fight betwixt two Spanish men of war, and Captain Merham, with Smith. 39 Chap. 21. The continuation of the general History of Virginia; the Summer Isles; and New England; with their present estate from 1624. to this present 1629. 41. Chap. 22. The proceedings and present estate of the Summer Iles, from An. Dom. 1624. to this present 1629. 45. Chap. 23. The proceedings and present estate of New England, since 1624. to this present 1629. 46. Chap. 24. A brief discourse of diverse voyages made unto the goodly Country of Guiana, and the great River of the Amazons; relating also the present Plantation there. 48. Chap. 25. The beginning and proceedings of the new plantation of St. Christopher by Captain Warner. 51. Chap. 26. The first planting of the Barbados. 55. Chap. 27. The first plantation of the I'll of Mevis. 56. Chap. 28. The bad life, qualities and conditions of Pirates; and how they taught the Turks and Moors to become men of war. 58. To my worthy friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. TWo greatest Shires of England did thee bear, Renowned Yorkshire, Gaunt-stild Lancashire; But what's all this? even Earth, Sea, Heaven above, Tragabigzanda, Callamata's love, Dear Pocahontas, Madam Shano●'s too, Who did what love with modesty could do: Record thy worth, thy birth, which as I live, Even in thy reading such choice solace give, As I could wish (such wishes would do well) Many such Smiths in this our Israel. R. BRATHWAIT. To my noble brother and friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. THou hast a course so full of honour run, Envy may snarl, as dogs against the Sun May bark, not bite: for what deservedly With thy life's danger, valour, policy, Acquaint warlike stratagems, ability And judgement, thou hast got, fame sets so high Detraction cannot reach: thy worth shall stand A pattern to succeeding ages, and Clothed in thy own lines, ever shall add grace, Unto thy native Country and thy race; And when dissolved, laid in thy mother's womb; These, Caesar-like, Smith's Epitaph and tomb. ANTHONY FIREBY. To his valiant and deserving friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. MOngst Frenchmen, Spaniards, Hungars, Tartars, Turks, And wild Virginians too, this tells thy works: Now some will ask, what benefit? what gain? Is added to thy store for all this pain? The art then content to say, content is all, thoust got content for perils, pain and thrall; 'tis lost to look for more: for few men now Regard Wit, Learning, Valour; but allow The quintessence of praise to him that can Number his own got gold, and riches, than The art Valiant, Learned, Wise; Paul's counsel will, Admire thy merits, magnify thy skill. The last of thine to which I set my hand Was a Sea Grammar; this by Sea and Land, Serves us for imitation: I know none, That like thyself hast come, and run, and gone, To such praiseworthy actions: be't approved, thoust well deserved of best men to be loved: If France, or Spain, or any foreign soil Could claim thee theirs, for these thy pains and toil, thou'dst got reward and honour: now adays, What our own natives do, we seldom praise. Good men will yield thee praise; then slight the rest; 'tis best praiseworthy to have pleased the best. Tuissimus ED. JORDAN. To my worthy friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. Dear noble Captain, who by Sea and Land, To act the earnest of thy name hast hand And heart; who canst with skill design the Fort, The Leaguer, Harbour, City, Shore, and Port: Whose sword and pen in bold, ruff, Martial wise, Put forth to try and bear away the prize, From Caelar and Blaize Monluc: Can it be, That Men alone in Gonnels fortune see Thy worth advanced? no wonder since our age, Is now at large a Bedlam or a Stage. RICH. JAMES. To his worthy friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. THou that hast had a spirit to fly like thunder, Without thy Country's charge through those strange dangers▪ Doth make my muse amazed, and more to wonder, That thy deserts should shared be by strangers, And thou neglected; (ah miracle!) most lamented, At thy great patience thus to rest contented. For none can truly say thou didst deceive, Thy Soldiers, Sailors, Merchants, nor thy friends, But all from thee a true account receive, Yet nought to thee all these thy virtues brings; Is none so noble to advance thy merit, If any be, let him thy praise inherit. MA. HAWKINS. To my worthy friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. TO combat with three Turks in single du'le, Before two Armies, who the like hath done? Slain thy great jailer; found a common weal In fair America where; thou hast won No less renown amongst their Savage Kings, Than Turkish wars, that thus thy honour sings. Could not those tyrants daunt thy matchless spirit, Nor all the cruelty of envies spite: Will not thy Country yet reward thy merit, Nor in thy acts and writings take delight? Which here in so few sheets doth more express Than volumes great, this is thy happiness. RICHARD MEADE. To my well deserving friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. THou hast no need to covet new applause, Nor do I think vainglory moves thee to it; But since it is thy will (though without cause) To move a needless thing, yet will I do it: Do it in brief I will, or else I do the wrong, And say, read o'er Captain Smiths former song; His first then will invite thee to his latter: Reader 'tis true; I am not bribed to flatter. EDW. INGHAM. To his approved friend, the Author; Captain JOHN SMITH. THe old Greek Beard, counts him the only man, Who knows strange Countries, like his Ithacan, And wise, as valiant, by his observation, Can tell the several customs of each Nation: All these are met in thee, who will not then Repute thee in the rank of worthiest men? To th' Western world to former times unknown, Thy active spirit hath thy valour shown: The Turks and Tartars both can testify, Thee t'have deserved a Captain's dignity; But verse, thou needest not to express thy worth, Thy acts, this book do plainly set it forth. M. CARTNER. To the Valorous and truly- virtuous soldier, Captain JOHN SMITH. NO * Nulla fides pietasque viris, qui castra sequuntur. Faith in Camp? 'tis false: see pious Smith Hath brought straggling Astraea back, and with An all-outdaring spirit made Valour stand Upheld by Virtue in bold Mars his land: If Valorous, be praise; how great's his Name? Whose Valour joined with Virtue laud's his Fame. 'Twas Homer's boast of wise Laertes son, * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. Odyst. ●c. Well-read in men and Cities: than thou none (Great Smith) of these can more true tales rehearse; What want thy praises then, but Homer's verse? In Smithum Distichon. Quisque suae sortis * Appius. Faber: an Faber exstitit unquam T● (Smithe) fortunae verior usque suae? I. C. C. P. To his noble friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. TO see bright honour sparkled all in gore, Would steel a spirit that ne'er fought before: And that's the height of Fame, when our best blood, Is nobly spilt in actions great and good: So thou hast taught the world to purchase Fame, Rearing thy story on a glorious frame, And such foundation doth thy merits make it, As all detractions rage shall never shake it; Thy actions crown themselves, and thy own pen, Gives them the best and truest Epiphonem. BRIAN O ROURKE. To his truly deserving friend, Captain JOHN SMITH. CAn one please all? there's none from Censure free, To look for't than it were absurd in thee; It's easy work to censure sweetest Lays, Where Ignorance is judge thoved have no praise: Wisdom I know will mildly judge of all, Envious hearts, tongues, pens, are dippt in Gall. Proud malignant times will you now bring forth Monsters at least to snarl at others worth; O do not so, but wisely look on him That wrought such Honours for his Country's King▪ Of Turks and Tartars thou hast won the field, The great Bashaw his Courage thou hast quelled; In the Hungarian war thou'st showed thy Arts, Proved thy Self a Soldier true in all parts: Thy Arms are decked with that thy Sword hath won, Which malice can't outwear till day be done: For three proud Turks in single fight thou'st slew, Their Heads adorn thy Arms, for witness true; Let Mars and Neptune both with Pregnant wit, Extol thy due deserts, He pray for it. SALO. TANNER. THE TRUE TRAVELS, ADVENTURES, AND OBSERVATIONS OF CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH, in Europe, Asia, Africa, and America: beginning about the year 1593. and continued to this present 1629. CHAP. I. His Birth; Apprenticeship; Going into France; His beginning with ten shillings and three pence; His Service in Netherlands; His bad passage into Scotland; His return to Willoughby; And how he lived in the Woods. HE was borne in Willoughby in Lincolnshire, and a Scholar in the two Free-schooles of Alford and Louth. His father anciently descended from the ancient Smiths of Crudley in Lancashire; his mother from the Rickands at great Heck in Yorkshire. His parents dying when he was about thirteen years of age, left him a competent means, which he not being capable to manage, little regarded; his mind being even then set upon brave adventures, sold his Satchel, books, and all he had, intending secretly to get to Sea, but that his father's death stayed him. But now the guardians of his estate more regarding it than him, he had liberty enough, though no means, to get beyond the Sea. About the age of fifteen years he was bound an Apprentice to Mr. Thomas Sendal of Linne, the greatest Merchant of all those parts; but because he would not presently send him to Sea, he never saw his master in eight years after. At last he ●ound means to attend Mr. Perigrine Barty into France, second son to the Right Honourable Perigrine, that generous Lord Willoughby, and famous Soldier; where coming to his brother Robert, then at Orleans, now Earl of Linsey, and Lord great Chamberlain of England; being then but little youths under Tutorage: his service being needless, within a month or six weeks they sent him back again to his friends; who when he came from London they liberally gave him (but out of his own estate) ten shillings to be rid of him; such oft is the share of fatherless children: but those two Honourable Brethren gave him sufficient to return for England. But it was the least thought of his determination, for now being freely at liberty in Paris, growing acquainted with one Master David Hume, who making some use of his purse, gave him Letters to his friends in Scotland to prefer him to King james. Arriving at Roan, he better bethinks himself, seeing his money near spent, down the River he went to Haver de grace, where he first began to learn the life of a soldier: Peace being concluded in France, he went with Captain joseph Duxbury into the Low-countries, under whose Colours having served three or four years, he took his journey for Scotland, to deliver his Letters. At Ancusan he embarked himself for Lethe, but as much danger, as shipwreck and sickness could endure, he had at the holy I'll in Northumberland near Berwick: (being recovered) into Scotland he went to deliver his Letters. After much kind usage amongst those honest Scots at Ripweth and Broxmoth, but neither money nor means to make him a Courtier, he returned to Willoughby in Lincolnshire; where within a short time being glutted with too much company, wherein he took small delight, he retired himself into a little woody pasture, a good way from any town, environed with many hundred Acres of other woods: Here by a fair brook he built a Pavilion of boughs, where only in his clothes he lay. His study was machiavil Art of war, and Marcus Aurelius; his exercise a good horse, with his lance and Ring; his food was thought to be more of venison than any thing else; what he wanted his man brought him. The country wondering at such an Hermit; His friends persuaded one Signior Theadora Polaloga, Rider to Henry Earl of Lincoln, an excellent Horseman, and a noble Italian Gentleman, to insinuate into his wooddish acquaintances, whose Languages and good discourse, and exercise of riding drew him to stay with him at Tattersall. Long these pleasures could not content him, but he returned again to the Low-countrieses. Chap II. The notable villainy of four French Gallants, and his revenge; Smith thrown overboard; Captain La Roche of Saint Malo relieves him. THus when France and Netherlands had taught him to ride a Horse and use his Arms, with such rudiments of war, as his tender years in those martial Schools could attain unto; he was desirous to see more of the world, and try his fortune against the Turks, both lamenting and repenting to have seen so many Christians slaughter one another. Opportunity casting him into the company of four French Gallants well attended, A notable villan● of four ●rench Gallants. feigning to him the one to be a great Lord, the rest his Gentlemen, and that they were all devoted that way; over-persuaded him to go with them into France, to the Duchess of Mercury, from whom they should not only have means, but also Letters of favour to her noble Duke, than General for the Emperor Rodolphus in Hungary; which he did, with such ill weather as winter affordeth, in the dark night they arrived in the broad shallow Inlet of Saint Va●leries sur Some in Picardy; his French Lord knowing he had good apparel, and better furnished with money than themselves, so plotted with the Master of the ship to set his and their own trunks a shore leaving Smith aboard till the boat could return, which was the next day after towards evening; the reason he alleged was the sea went so high he could come no sooner, and that his Lord was gone to Amiens where they would stay his coming; which treacherous villainy, when diverse other soldiers, and passengers understood, they had like to have slain the Master, and had they known how, would have run away with the ship. Coming on shore he had but one Carralue, A Carralue is in value a penny. was forced to sell his cloak to pay for his passage. One of the soldiers, called Curzianvere, compassionating his injury, assured him this great Lord Depreau was only the son of a Lawyer of Mortaigne in base Brittany, and his Attendants Cursell, La Nelie, and Monferrat, three young citizens, as arrant cheats as himself; but if he would accompany him, he would bring him to their friends, but in the interim supplied his wants: thus travelling by Deep, Codebeck, Humphla, Pount-demer in Normandy, they came to Cane in base Normandy; where both this noble Curzianvere, and the great Prior of the great Abbey of S. Steven (where is the ruinous Tomb of William the Conqueror,) and many other of his friends kindly welcomed him, and brought him to Mortaigne, where he found Depreau and the rest, but to small purpose; for Mr. Curzianvere was a banished man, and durst not be seen, but to his friends: yet the bruit of their cozenage occasioned the Lady Collumber, the Baron Larshan, the Lord Shasghe, and diverse other honourable persons, to supply his wants, and with them to recreate himself so long as he would: but such pleasant pleasures suited little with his poor estate, and his restless spirit, that could never find content, to receive such noble favours, as he could neither deserve nor requite: but wand'ring from Port to Port to find some man of war, spent that he had, and in a Forest, near dead with grief and cold, a rich Farmer found him by a fair Fountain under a tree: This kind Peasant relieved him again to his content, to follow his intent. Not long after, as he passed thorough a great grove of trees, ●ere he incounned one of the thiefs. between Pounterson and Dina in Britain, it was has chance to meet Cursell, more miserable than himself: His piercing injuries had so small patience, as without any word they both drew, and in a short time Cursell fell to the ground, where from an old ruinated Tower the inhabitants seeing them, were satisfied, when they heard Cursell confess what had formerly passed; and that how in the dividing that they had stolen from him, they fell by the ears amongst themselves, that were actors in it; but for his part, he excused himself to be innocent as well of the one, as of the other. In regard of his hurt, Smith was glad to be so rid of him, directing his course to an honourable Lord, The noblenesle of the Earl of Ployer. the Earl of Ployer, who during the war in France, with his two brethren, Viscount Poomory, and Baron d' Mercy, who had been brought up in England; by him he was better refurnished than ever. When they had showed him Saint Malo Mount, Saint Michael, Lambal, Simbreack, Lanion, and their own fair Castle of Tuncadeck, Gingan, and diverse other places in Britanny, (and their British Cornwall) taking his leave, he took his way to Raynes, the Britain's chief City, and so to Nantes, poitiers, Rochel, and Bordeaux. The ●umour of the strength of Bayon in Biskay, caused him to see it; and from thence took his way from Leskar in Biearne, & Paw in the kingdom of Navarre to Tolouz 〈◊〉 Gascoigne, Bezers and Carcassone, Narbone, Montpellier, Nimes in Languedock, and thorough the Country of Avignion, by Arles to Marcellos in Province, there embarking himself for Italy, the ship was enforced to Tolonne, and putting again to sea, ill weather so grew upon them, they anchored close aboard the shore, under the little Isle of S. Mary, against Niece in Savoy. Here the inhuman Provincials, An inhuman act of the Provincials in casting 〈◊〉 overboard. with a rabble of Pilgrims of diverse Nations going to Rome, hourly cursing him, not only for a Hugonoit, but his Nation they swore were all Pirates, and so vildly railed on his dread Sovereign Queen Elizabeth, and that they never should have fair weather so long as he was aboard them; their disputations grew to that passion, that they threw him overboard, yet God brought him to that little Isle, where was no inhabitants, but a few kine and goats. The next morning he espied two ships more riding by them, put in by the storm, that fetched him aboard, well refreshed him, and so kindly used him, that he was well contented to try the rest of his fortune with them. After he had related unto them his former discourse, what for pity, and the love of the Honourable Earl of Ployer, this noble Britain his neighbour, Captain la Roche of Saint Malo, Capt. Lafoy Roche relieves him. regarded and entertained him for his well respected friend. With the next fair wind they failed along by the Coast of Corsica and Sardinia, and crossing the gulf of Tunis, passed by Cape Bona to the Isle of Lampadosa, leaving the coast of Barbary till they came at Cape Rosata, and so along the African shore, for Alexandria in Egypt. There delivering their fraught, they went to Scandaroone; rather to view what ships was in the Road, than any thing else: keeping their course by Cypress and the coast of Asia, sailing by Rhodes, the Archipellagans, Candia, and the coast of Grecia, and the Isle of Zaffalonia. They lay to and again a few days betwixt the Isle of Corfue and the Cape of Otranto in the Kingdom of Naples, in the Entrance of the Adriatic sea. CHAP. III. A desperate Sea-fight in the straits; His passage to Rome, Naples, and the view of Italy. BEtwixt the two Capes they meet with an Argosy of Venice, it seemed the Captain desired to speak with them, A desperate sea-fight. whose untoward answer was such, as slew them a man; whereupon the Britain presently gave them the broadside, than his Stern, and his other broadside also, and continued the chase, with his chase pieces, till he gave them so many broadsides one after another, that the Argosies sails and tackling was so torn, she stood to her defence, and made shot for shot; twice in one hour and a half the Britain boarded her, yet they cleared themselves, but clapping her aboard again, the Argosy fired him, which with much danger to them both was presently quenched. This rather augmented the Britain's rage, than abated his courage; for having reaccommodated himself again, shot her so oft between wind and water, she was ready to sink, than they yielded; the Britain lost fifteen men, she twenty, besides diverse were hurt, the rest went to work on all hands; some to stop the leaks, others to guard the prisoners that were chained, the rest to rifle her. The Silks, Velvets, Cloth of gold, and Tissue, Pyasters, Chicqueenes and Sultanies, which is gold and silver, they unloaded in four and twenty hours, was wonderful, where of having sufficient, and tired with toil, they cast her off with her company, with as much good merchandise as would have fraughted such another Britain, that was but two hundred Tons, she four or five hundred. To repair his defects, he stood for the coast of Calabria, but hearing there was six or seven Galleys at Mesina he departed thence for Malta, but the wind coming fair, he kept his course along the coast of the Kingdom of Sicilia by Sardinia and Corsica, till he came to the Road of Antibo in Peamon, where he set Smith on shore with five hundred chicqueenes, and a little box God sent him worth near as much more. Here he left this noble Britain, and embarked himself for Lygorne, being glad to have such opportunity and means to better his experience by the view of Italy; and having passed Tuscany, and the Country of Sieana, where he found his dear friends, the two Honourable Brethren, the Lord Willoughby and his Brother cruelly wounded, in a desperate fray, yet to their exceeding great honour. The Pope's holy Stairs brought from jerusalem, whereon (they say) Christ went up to Pontious Pilate. Then to Viterbo and many other Cities he came to Rome, where it was his chance to see Pope Clement the eight, with many Cardinals, creep up the holy Stairs, which they say are those our Saviour Christ went up to Pontius Pilate, where blood falling from his head, being pricked with his crown of thorns, the drops are marked with nails of steel, upon them none dare go but in that manner, saying so many Ave-maries' and Pater-nosters, as is their devoton, and to kiss the nails of steel: But on each side is a pair of such like stairs, up which you may go, stand, or kneel, but divided from the holy Stairs by two walls: right against them is a Chapel, where hangs a great silver Lampe, which burneth continually, yet they say the oil neither increaseth nor diminisheth. A little distant is the ancient Church of Saint john de Lateran, where he saw him say Mass, which commonly he doth upon some Friday once a month. Having saluted Father Parsons, that famous English jesuit, and satisfied himself with the rarities of Rome, he went down the River of Tiber to Civita Vechia, where he embarked himself to satisfy his eye with the fair City of Naples, and her Kingdom's nobility; returning by Capua, Rome and Seana, he passed by that admired C●tie of Florence, the Cities and Countries of Bolonia, Ferrara, Mantua, Padu, and Venice, whose Gulf he passed from Malamoco and the Adriatic Sea for Ragouza, spending some time to see that barren broken coast of Albania and Dalmatia, to Capo de Islria, travelling the main of poor Slavonia by Lubbiano, till he came to Grates in Steria, the Seat of Ferdinando Archduke of Austria, now Emperor of Almania: where he met an English man, and an Irish jesuit, who acquainted him with many brave Gentlemen of good quality, especially with the Lord Ebersbaught, with whom trying such conclusions, as he projected to undertake, preferred him to Baron Kisell, General of the Ar●llery, and he to a worthy Colonel, the Earl of Meldritch, with whom going to Vienne in Austria, under whose Regiment, in what service, and how he spent his time, this ensuing Discourse will declare. CHAP. IU. The Siege of Olumpagh; An excellent Stratagem by Smith; Another not much worse. The siege of Olumpagh. AFter the loss of Caniza, the Turks with twenty thousand besieged the strong Town of Olumpagh so straightly, as they were cut off from all intelligence and hope of succour; till john Smith, this English Gentleman, acquainted Baron Kisell, General of the Archduke's Artillery, he had taught the Governor, his worthy friend, such a Rule, that he would undertake to make him know any thing he intended, and have his answer, would they bring him but to some place where he might make the flame of a Torch seen to the Town; Kisell inflamed with this strange invention; Smith made it so plain, that forthwith he gave him guides, who in the dark night brought him to a mountain, where he showed three Torches equidistant from other, which plainly appearing to the Town, the Governor presently apprehended, and answered again with three other fires in like manner; each knowing the others being and intent; Smith, though distant seven miles, signified to him these words: On Thursday at night I will charge on the East, at the Alarm, sally you; Ebersbaught answered he would, and thus it was done: First he writ his message as brief, you see, as could be, than divided the Alphabet in two parts thus; A. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. k. l. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. m. n. o. p. q. r. s. t. v. w. x. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. y. z. 2. 2. The first part from A. to L. An excellent Stratagem. is signified by showing and hiding one link●, so oft as there is letters from A. to that letter you mean; the other part from M. to Z. is mentioned by two lights in like manner. The end of a word is signified by showing of three lights, ever staying your light at that letter you mean, till the other may write it in a paper, and answer by his signal, which is one light, it is done, beginning to count the letters by the lights, every time from A. to M. by this means also the other returned his answer, whereby each did understand other. The Guides all this time having well viewed the Camp, returned to Kisell, who, doubting of his power being but ten thousand, was animated by the Guides, how the Turks were so divided by the River in two parts, they could not easily second each other. Another Stratagem. To which Smith added this conclusion; that two or three thousand pieces of match fastened to diverse small lines of an hundred fathom in length being armed with powder, might all be fired and stretched at an instant before the Alarm, upon the Plain of Hysnaburg, supported by two staves, at each lines end, in that manner would seem like so many Musketeers; which was put in practice; and being discovered by the Turks, they prepared to encounter these false fires, thinking there had been some great Army: whilst Kisell with his ten thousand being entered the Turks quarter, who ran up and down as men amazed. It was not long ere Ebersbaught was pellmell with them in their Trenches; in which distracted confusion, a third part of the Turks, that besieged that side towards Knousbruck, were slain; many of the rest drowned, but all fled. The other part of the Army was so busied to resist the false fires, that Kisell before the morning put two thousand good soldiers in the Town, and with small loss was retired; the Garrison was well relieved with that they found in the Turks quarter, which caused the Turks to raise their siege and return to Caniza: and Kisell with much honour was received at Kerment, and occasioned the Author a good reward and preferment, to be Captain of two hundred and fifty Horsemen, under the Conduct of Colonel Voldo, Earl of Meldritch. CHAP. V. The siege of Stowlle-wesenburg; The effects of Smith's Fireworks; A worthy exploit of Earl Rosworme; Earl Meldritch takes the Bashaw prisoner. A General rumour of a general peace, now spread itself over all the face of those tormented Countries: but the Turk intended no such matter, but levied soldiers from all parts he could. The Emperor also, by the assistance of the Christian Princes, provided three Armies, the one led by the Archduke Mathias, the Emperor's brother, and his Lieutenant Duke Mercury to defend Low Hungary, the second, by Ferdinando the Archduke of Steria, and the Duke of Mantua his Lieutenant to regain Caniza; the third by Gonzago, Governor of High Hungary, to join with Georgio Busca, to make an absolute conquest of Transilvania. The siege of Alba Regalis. Duke Mercury with an Army of thirty thousand, whereof near ten thousand were French, besieged Stowlle-wesenburg, otherwise called Alba Regalis, a place so strong by Art and Nature, that it was thought impregnable. At his first coming, the Turks sallied upon the German quarter, slew near five hundred, and returned before they were thought on. The next night in like manner they did near as much to the Bemers, and Hungarians; of which fortune still presuming, thinking to have found the French quarter as careless, eight or nine hundred of them were cut in pieces and taken prisoners. In this encounter Mousieur Grandvile, a brave French Colonel, received seven or eight cruel wounds, yet followed the Enemy to the Ports; he came off alive, but within three or four days died. Earl Meldritch, by the information of three or four Christians, (escaped out of the Town) upon every Alarm, where there was greatest assemblies and throng of people, The effect of good 〈◊〉- work●. caused Captain Smith to put in practice his fiery Dragons, he had demonstrated unto him, and the Earl Von Sulch at Comora, which he thus performed: Having prepared forty or fifty round-bellied earthen pots, and filled them with hand Gunpowder, then covered them with Pitch, mingled with Brimstone and Turpentine; and quartering as many Musket-bullets, that hung together but only at the Centre of the division, stuck them round in the mixture about the pots, and covered them again with the same mixture, over that a strong Cerecloth, then over all a good thickness of Towze-match well tempered with oil of Lin-seed, Campheer, and powder of Brimstone, these he fitly placed in Slings, graduated so near as they could to the places of these Assemblies. At midnight upon the Alarm, it was a fearful sight to see the short flaming course of their flight in the air, but presently after their fall, the lamentable noise of the miserable slaughtered Turks was most wonderful to hear: Besides, they had fired that Suburb at the Port of Buda in two or three places, which so troubled the Turks to quench, that had there been any means to have assaulted them, they could hardly have resisted the fire, and their enemies. The Earl Rosworme, contrary to the opinion of all men, would needs undertake to find means to surprise the Segeth and Suburb of the City, strongly defended by a muddy Lake, which was thought unpassable. The Duke having planted his Ordnance, battered the other side, A worthy exploit of Earl Rosworme. whilst Rosworme, in the dark night, with every man a bundle of sedge and bavins still thrown before them, so jaded up the Lake, as they surprised that unregarded Suburb before they were discovered: upon which unexpected Alarm, the Turks fled into the City, and the other Suburb not knowing the matter, got into the City also, leaving their Suburb for the Duke, who, with no great resistance, took it, with many pieces of Ordnance; the City, being of no such strength as the Suburbs, with their own Ordnance was so battered, that it was taken perforce, with such a merciless execution, as was most pitiful to behold. Earl Meldritch takes the Bashaw prisoner. The Bashaw notwithstanding drew together a party of five hundred before his own Palace, where he intended to die; but seeing most of his men slain before him, by the valiant Captain Earl Meldritch, who took him prisoner with his own hands; and with the hazard of himself saved him from the fury of other troops, that did pull down his Palace, and would have rend him in pieces; had he not been thus preserved. The Duke thought his victory much honoured with such a Prisoner; took order he should be used like a Prince, and with all expedition gave charge presently to repair the breaches, and the ruins of this famous City, that had been in the possession of the Turks near threescore years. CHAP. VI A brave encounter of the Turks Army with the Christians; Duke Mercury overthroweth Assan Bashaw; He divides the Christian Army; His nobleness and death. MAHOMET, the great Turk, during the siege, had raised an Army of sixty thousand men to have relieved it; but hearing it was lost, he sent Assan Bashaw General of his Army, the Bashaw of Buda, Bashaw Amaro●, to see if it were possible to regain it; The Duke understanding there could be no great experience in such a new levied Army as Assan had; having put a strong Garrison into it: and with the brave Colonel Rosworme, Culnits, Meldritch, the Rhine-Grave, Vahan and many others; with twenty thousand good soldiers, set forward to meet the Turk in the Plains of Girke. A brave encounter of the Turks Army with the Christians. Those two Armies encountered as they marehed, where began a hot and bloody Skirmish betwixt them, Regiment against Regiment, as they came in order, till the night parted them: Here Earl Meldritch was so environed amongst those half circular Regiments of Turks, they supposed him their Prisoner, and his Regiment lost; but his two most courageous friends, Vihan and Culnits, made such a passage amongst them, that it was a terror to see how horse and man lay sprawling and tumbling, some one way, some another on the ground. The Earl there at that time made his valo● shine more bright than his armour, which seemed then painted with Turkish blood, he slew the brave Zanzack Bugola, and made his passage to his friends, but near half his Regiment was slain. Captain Smith had his horse sl●●e under him, and himself sore wounded; but he was not long unmounted, for there was choice enough of horses, that wanted masters. The Turk thinking the victory sure against the Duke, whose Army, by the Siege and the Garrison, he had left behind him, was much weakened, would not be content with one, but he would have all; and left the Duke should return to Alba Regalis, he sent that night twenty thousand to besiege the City, assuring them he would keep the Duke or any other from relieving them. Two or three days they lay each by other, entrenching themselves; the Turks daring the Duke daily to a set battle, who at length drew out his Army, led by the Rhine-Grave, Culnits and Meldritch, who upon their first encounter, charged with that resolute and valiant courage, as disordered not only the foremost squadrons of the Turks, but enforced all the whole Army to retire to the Camp, Duke Mercury overthroweth Assan Rassa with the loss of five or six thousand, with the Bashaw of Buda, and four or five Zanzacks', with diverse other great Commanders, two hundred Prisoners, and nine pecces of Ordnance. At that instant appeared, as it were, another Army coming out of a valley over a plain hill, that caused the Duke at that time to be contented, and to retire to his Trenches; which gave time to Assan to reorder his disordered squadrons: Here they lay nine or ten days, and more supplies repaired to them, expecting to try the event in a set battle; but the soldiers on both parties, by reason of their great wants and approach of winter, grew so discontented, that they were ready of themselves to break up the Leaguer; the Bashaw, retiring himself to Buda, had some of the Rear Troops cut off. Amaroz Bashaw hearing of this, found such bad welcome at Alba Regalis, and the Town so strongly repaired, with so brave a Garrison, raised his siege, and retired to Zigetum. The Duke understanding that the Archduke Ferdinando had so resolutely besieged Caniza, as what by the loss of Alba Regalis, and the Turks retreat to Buda, being void of hope of any relief, doubted not but it would become again the Christians. Duke Mercury divideth his Army. To the furtherance whereof, the Duke divided his Army into three parts. The Earl of Rosworme went with seven thousand to Caniza; the Earl of Meldritch with six thousand he sent to assist Georgio Busca against the Transilvanians, the rest went with himself to the Garrisons of Strigonium and Komara; having thus worthily behaved himself, he arrived at Vienne, where the Archdukes and the Nobility with as much honour received him, as if he had conquered all Hungaria; his very Picture they esteemed would make them fortunate, which thousands kept as curiously as a precious relic. To requite this honour, preparing himself to return into France, to raise new Forces against the next year, with the two Archdukes, Mathias and Maximilian, and diverse others of the Nobility, was with great magnificence conducted to Nurenburg, there by them royally feasted, Duke 〈◊〉 and his brother in law ere suddenly. (how it chanced is not known;) but the next morning he was found dead, and his brother in law died two days after; whose hearts, after this great triumph, with much sorrow were carried into France. CHAP. VII. The unhappy Siege of Caniza; Earl Meldritch serveth Prince Sigismundus; Prince Moses besiegeth Regal; Smiths three single combats; His Patent from Sigismundus, and reward. THe worthy Lord Rosworme had not a worse journey to the miserable Siege of Caniza, The unhappy siege of Caniza. (where by the extremity of an extraordinary continuing tempest of hail, wind, frost and snow, in so much that the Christians were forced to leave their Tents and Artillery, and what they had; it being so cold that three or four hundred of them were frozen to death in a night, and two or three thousand lost in that miserable flight in the snowy tempest, though they did know no enemy at all to follow them:) than the noble Earl of Meldritch had to Transilvania, where hearing of the death of Michael and the brave Duke Mercury, and knowing the policy of Busca, and the Prince his Royalty, being now beyond all belief of men, in possession of the best part of Transilvania, persuaded his troops, in so honest a cause, to assist the Prince against the Turk, rather than Busca against the Prince. The soldiers being worn out with those hard pays and travels, Earl Meldritch serveth Prince Sigismundus. upon hope to have free liberty to make booty upon what they could get possession of from the Turks, was easily persuaded to follow him whithersoever. Now this noble Earl was a Transylvanian borne, and his father's Country yet inhabited by the Turks; for Transilvania was yet in three divisions, though the Prince had the hearts both of Country and people; yet the Frontiers had a Garrison amongst the unpassable mountains, some for the Emperor, some for the Prince, and some for the Turk: to regain which small estate, he desired leave of the Prince to try his fortunes, and to make use of that experience, the time of twenty years had taught him in the Emperor's service, promising to spend the rest of his days for his country's defence in his Excellency's service. The Prince glad of so brave a Commander, and so many expert and ancient soldiers, made him Campe-master of his Army, gave him all necessary relief for his troops and what freedom they desired to plunder the Turks. The Earl having made many incursions into the Land of Zarkam among those rocky mountains, where were some Turks, some Tartars, Earl Meldritch maketh incursions to discover Regal. but most Bandittoes', Rennegadoes, and such like, which sometimes he forced into the Plains of Regal, where is a City not only of men and fortifications, strong of itself, but so environed with mountains, that made the passages so difficult, that in all these wars no attempt had been made upon it to any purpose: Having satisfied himself with the Situation and the most convenient passages to bring his Army unto it: The earth no sooner put on her green habit, than the Earl overspread her with his armed troops. To possess himself first of the most convenient passage, which was a narrow valley betwixt two high mountains; he sent Colonel Veltus with his Regiment, dispersed in companies to lie in Ambuscado, as he had directed them, and in the morning to drive all the cattle they could find before a Fort in that passage, whom he supposed would sally, seeing but some small party, to recover their prey; which took such good success, that the Garrison was cut off by the Ambuscado, and Veltus seized on the Sconces, which was abandoned. Meldritch glad of so fortunate a beginning, it was six days ere he could with six thousand pioneers make passage for his Ordnance: The Turks having such warning, strengthened the Town so with men and provision, that they made a scorn of so small a number as Meldritch brought with him before the City, which was but eight thousand. Before they had pitched their Tents, the Turks sallied in such abundance, as for an hour they had rather a bloody battle than a skirmish, but with the loss of near fifteen hundred on both sides. Moses besiegeth Regal. The Turks were chased till the City's Ordnance caused the Earl to retire. The next day Zachel Moses, General of the Army, pitched also his tents with nine thousand foot and horse, and six and twenty pieces of Ordnance; but in regard of the situation of this strong Fortress, they did neither fear them nor hurt them, being upon the point of a fair promontory, environed on the one side within half a mile with an unuseful mountain, and on the other side with a fair Plain, where the Christians encamped, but so commanded by their Ordnance, they spent near a month in entrenching themselves, and raising their mounts to plant their batteries; which slow proceedings the Turks oft derided, that their Ordnance were at pawn, and how they grew fat for want of exercise, and fearing lest they should depart ere they could assault their City, sent this Challenge to any Captain in the Army. That to delight the Ladies, who did long to see some courtlike pastime, the Lord Turbashaw did defy any Captain, that had the command of a Company, who durst combat with him for his head: The matter being discussed, it was accepted, but so many questions grew for the undertaking, it was decided by lots, which fell upon Captain Smith, before spoken of. Three single Combats. Truce being made for that time, the Rampires all beset with fair Dames, and men in Arms, the Christians in Battalio; Turbashaw with a noise of Howboyes entered the fields well mounted and armed; on his shoulders were fixed a pair of great wings, compacted of Eagles feathers within a ridge of silver, richly garnished with gold and precious stones, a janisary before him, bearing his Launce, on each side another leading his horse; where long he stayed nor, ere Smith with a noise of Trumpets, only a Page bearing his Lance, passing by him with a courteous salute, took his ground with such good success, that at the sound of the charge, he passed the Turk thorough the sight of his Beaver, face, head and all, that he fell dead to the ground, where alighting and unbracing his Helmet, cut off his head, and the Turks took his body; and so returned without any hurt at all. The head he presented to the Lord Moses, the General, who kindly accepted it, and with joy to the whole army he was generally welcomed. The death of this Captain so swelled in the heart of one Grualgo, his vowed friend, as rather enraged with madness than choler, he directed a particular challenge to the Conqueror, to regain his friend's head, or lose his own, with his horse and Armour for advantage, which according to his desire, was the next day undertaken: as before upon the sound of the Trumpets, their Lances flew in pieces upon a clear passage, but the Turk was near unhorsed. Their Pistols was the next, which marked Smith upon the placard; but the next shot the Turk was so wounded in the left arm, that being not able to rule his horse, and defend himself, he was thrown to the ground, and so bruised with the fall, that he lost his head, as his friend before him; with his horse and Armour; but his body and his rich apparel was sent back to the Town. Every day the Turks made some sallies, but few skirmishes would they endure to any purpose. Our works and approaches being not yet advanced to that height and effect which was of necessity to be performed; to delude time, Smith with so many incontradictible persuading reasons, obtained leave that the Ladies might know he was not so much enamoured of their servants heads, but if any Turk of their rank would come to the place of combat to redeem them, should have his also upon the like conditions, if he could win it. The challenge presently was accepted by Bonny Mulgro. The next day both the Champions entering the field as before, each discharging their Pistol, having no Lances, but such martial weapons as the defendant appointed, no hurt was done; their Battleaxes was the next, whose piercing bills made sometime the one, sometime the other to have scarce sense to keep their saddles, specially the Christian received such a blow that he lost his Battle-axe, and failed not much to have fallen after it, whereat the supposing conquering Turk, had a great shout from the Rampires. The Turk prosecuted his advantage to the uttermost of his power; yet the other, what by the readiness of his horse, and his judgement and dexterity in such a business, beyond all men's expectation, by God's assistance, not only avoided the Turks violence, but having drawn his Falchion, pierced the Turk so under the Culets thorough back and body, that although he alighted from his horse, he stood not long ere he lost his head, as the rest had done. CHAP. VIII. Georgio Busca an Alban his ingratitude to Prince Sigismundus; Prince Moses his Lieutenant, is overthrown by Busca, General for the Emperor Rodolphus; Sigismundus yieldeth his Country to Rodolphus; Busca assisteth Prince Rodoll in Wallachia. THis good success gave such great encouragement to the whole Army, that with a guard of six thousand, three spare horses, before each a Turks head upon a Lance, he was conducted to the General's Pavilion with his Presents. Moses' received both him and them with as much respect as the occasion deserved, embracing him in his arms, gave him a fair Horse richly furnished, a S●mitere and belt worth three hundred ducats; and Meldritch made him Sergeant major of his Regiment. But now to the siege, having mounted six and twenty pieces of Ordnance fifty or sixty foot above the Plain, made them so plainly tell his meaning, that within fifteen days two breaches were made, which the Turks as valiantly defended as men could; that day was made a darksome night, but by the light that proceeded from the murdering Muskets, and peacemaking Canon, whilst their slothful Governor lay in a Castle on the top of a high mountain, and like a valiant Prince asketh what's the matter, when horror and death stood amazed each at other, to see who should prevail to make him victorious: Moses commanding a general assault upon the sloping front of the high Promontory, Regal assaulted and taken. where the Barons of Budendorfe and Oberwin lost near half their Regiments, by logs, bags of powder, and such like, tumbling down the hill, they were to mount ere they could come to the breach; notwithstanding with an incredible courage they advanced to the push of the Pike with the defendants, that with the like courage repulsed, till the Earl Meldritch, Becklefield and Zarvana, with their fresh Regiments seconded them with that fury, that the Turks retired and fled into the Castle, from whence by a flag of truce they desired composition. The Earl remembering his father's death, battered it with all the Ordnance in the Town, and the next day took it; all he found could bear Arms he put to the sword, and set their heads upon stakes round about the walls, in the same manner they had used the Christians, when they took it. Moses' having repaired the Rampires, and thrown down the work in his Camp, he put in it a strong Garrison, though the pillage he had gotten in the Town was much, having been for a long time an impregnable den of thiefs; yet the loss of the Army so intermingled the sour with the sweet, as forced Moses to seek a further revenge, that he sacked Veratio, Solmos, and Kupronka, and with two thousand prisoners, most women and children, came to Esenberg, not far from the Prince's Palace, where he there Encamped. Sigismundus coming to view his Army, was presented with the Prisoners, and six and thirty Ensigns; where celebrating thanks to Almighty God in triumph of those victories, he was made acquainted with the service Smith had done at Olumpagh, Stowle-Wesenburg and Regal, for which with great honour he gave him three Turks heads in a Shield for his Arms, by Patent, under his hand and Seal, with an Oath ever to wear them in his Colours, his Picture in Gould, and three hundred Ducats, yearly for a Pension. The Patent. SIGISMUNDUS BATHORI, Dei gratia Dux Transilvaniae, Wallachiae, & Vandalorum; Comes Anchard, Salford, Growenda; Cunctis his literis significansus qui eas lecturi aut audituri sunt, concessam licentiam aut facultatem johanni Smith, natione Anglo Generoso, 250. militum Capitan●o sub Illustrissimi & Gravissimi Henrici Volda, Comitis de Meldri, Salmariae, & Peldoiae primario, ex 1000 equitibus & 1500. peditibus bello Vngarico conductione in Provincias suprascriptas sub Authoritate nostra: cui servituti omni laude, perpetuaque memoria dignum praebuit sese erga nos, ut virum strenuum pugnantem pro aris & focis decet. Quare è favore nostro militario ipsumordine condonavimus, & in Sigillum illius tria Turcica Capita designare & deprimere concessimus, quae ipse gladio suo ad Vrbem Regalem in singulari praelio vicit, mactavit, atque decollavit in Transilvaniae Provincia: Sed fortuna cum variabilis ancepsque sit idem forte fortuito in Wallachia Provincia Anno Domini 1602. die Mensis Novembris 18. cum multis aliis etian Nobilibus & aliis quibusdam militibus captus est à Domino Bascha electo ex Cambia regionis Tartariae, cujus severitate adductus salutem quantam potuit quaesivit, tantumque effecit, Deo omnipotente adjuvante, ut deliberavit se, & ad suos Commilitones revertit; ex quibus ipsum liberavimus, & haec nobis testimonia habuit ut majori licentia frueretur qua dignus esset, jam tendet in patriam suam dulcissimam: Rogamus ergo omnes nostros charissimos, confinitimos, Duces, Principes, Comites, Barones, Gubernatores Vrbium & Navium in eadem Regione & caeterarum Provinciarum in quibus ille residere conatiu fuerit ut idem permittatur Capitancus libere sine obstaculo omni versari. Haec ●cientes pergra●um nobis feceritis. Signatum Lesprizia in Misnia die Mensis Decembris 9 Anno Domini 1603. Cum Privilegio propriae Majestatis. SIGISMUNDUS BATHORI. UNIVERSIS, & singulis, cujuscunque loci, status, gradus ordinis, ac conditionis ad quos hoc praesens scriptum pervenerit, Guilielmus Segar Eques auratus aliàs dictus Garterus Principalis Rex Armorum Anglicorum, Salutem. Sciatis, quod Ego praedictus Garterus, notum, testatumque facio, quod Patentem suprascripium, cum manu propriapraedicti Ducis Transilvaniae subsignatum, & Sigillo suo affixum, Vidi: & Copiam veram ejusdem (in perpetuam rei memoriam) transcripsi, & recordavi in Archivis, & Registris Officii Armorum. Datum Londini 19 die Augusti, Anno Domini 1625. Annoque Regni Domini nostri CAROLI Dei gratia Magnae Britanniae, Franciae, & Hiberniae Regis, Fidei Defensoris, etc. Primo. GVILIELMUS SEGAR, Garterus. The same in English. SIGISMUNDUS BATHOR, by the Grace of God, Duke of Transilvania, Wallachia, and Moldavia, Earl of Anchard, Salford and Growenda; to whom this Writing may come or appear. Know that We have given leave and licence to john Smith an English Gentleman, Captain of 250. Soldiers, under the most Generous and Honourable Henry Volda, Earl of Meldritch, Salmaria, and Peldoia, Colonel of a thousand horse, and fifteen hundred foot, in the wars of Hungary, and in the Provinces aforesaid under our authority; whose service doth deserve all praise and perpetual memory towards us, as a man that did for God and his Country overcome his enemies: Wherefore out of Our love and favour, according to the law of Arms, We have ordained and given him in his shield of Arms, the figure and description of three Turks heads, which with his sword before the town of Regal, in single combat he did overcome, kill, and cut off, in the Province of Transilvania. But fortune, as she is very variable, so it chanced and happened to him in the Province of Wallachia, in the year our Lord, 1602. the 18. day of November, with many others, as well Noble men, as also diverse other Soldiers, were taken prisoners by the Lord Bashaw of Cambia, a Country of Tartary; whose cruelty brought him such good fortune, by the help and power of Almighty God, that he delivered himself, and returned again to his company and fellow soldiers, of whom We do discharge him, and this he hath in witness thereof, being much more worthy of a better reward; and now intends to return to his own sweet Country. We desire therefore all our loving and kind kinsmen, Dukes, Princes, Earls, Barons, Governors of Towns, Cities, or Ships, in this Kingdom, or any other Provinces he shall come in, that you freely let pass this the aforesaid Captain, without any hindrance or molestation, and this doing, with all kindness we are always ready to do the like for you. Sealed at Lipswick in Misenland, the ninth of December, in the year of our Lord, 1603. With the proper privilege of his Majesty. SIGISMUNDUS BATHOR. TO all and singular, in what place, state, degree, order, or condition whatsoever, to whom this present writing shall come: [William Segar Knight, otherwise Garter, and principal King of Arms of England, wish health. Know that I the aforesaid Garter, do witness and approve, that this aforesaid Patent, I have seen, signed, & sealed, under the proper hand and Seal Manual of the said Duke of Transilvania, and a true copy of the same, as a thing for perpetual memory, I have subscribed and recorded in the Register and office of the Heralds of Arms. Dated at London the nineteenth day of August, in the year of our Lord, 1625. and in the first year of our Sovereign Lord Charles by the grace of God, King of great Britain, France, and Ireland; Defender of the faith, etc. WILLIAM SEGAR. CHAP. IX. Sigismundus sends Ambassadors unto the Emperor; the conditions reassured; He yieldeth up all to Busca, and returneth to Prague. BVsca having all this time been raising new forces, was commanded from the Emperor again to invade Transilvania, which being one of the fruitfullest and strongest Countries in those parts, was now rather a desert, or the very spectacle of desolation; their fruits and fields overgrown with weeds, their Churches and battered Palaces and best buildings, as for fear, hid with Moss and Ivy; being the very Bulwark and Rampire of a great part of Europe, most fit by all Christians to have been supplied and maintained, was thus brought to ruin by them it most concerned to support it. But alas, what is it, when the power of Majesty pampered in all delights of pleasant vanity, neither knowing nor considering the labour of the Ploughman, the hazard of the Merchant, the oppression of Statesmen; nor feeling the piercing torments of broken limbs, & inveterated wounds, the toilsome marches, the bad lodging, the hungry diet, and the extreme misery that Soldiers endure to secure all those estates, and yet by the spite of malicious detraction, starves for want of their reward and recompenses; whilst the politic Courtier, that commonly aims more at his own honours & ends, than his Countries good, or his Prince's glory, honour, or security, as this worthy Prince too well could testify. But the Emperor being certified how weak and desperate his estate was, sent Busca again with a great Army, to try his fortune once more in Transilvania. The Prince considering how his Country & subjects were consumed, the small means he had any longer to defend his estate, both against the cruelty of the Turk, & the power of the Emperor, & the small care the Polanders had in supplying him, as they had promised, sent to Busca to have truce, till messengers might be sent to the Emperor for some better agreement, wherewith Busca was contented. The Ambassadors so prevailed, that the Emperor reassured unto them the conditions he had promised the Prince at their confederacy for the lands in Silesia, with 60000. ducats presently in hand, and 50000. ducats yearly as a pension. When this conclusion was known to Moses his Liestenant then in the field with the Army, that would do any thing rather than come in subjection to the Germans, Busca in Transilvania overthroweth Moses. he encouraged his Soldiers, and without any more ado marched to encounter Busca, whom he found much better provided than he expected; so that betwixt them in six or seven hours, more than five or six thousand on both sides lay dead in the field. Moses' thus overthrown, 〈◊〉 to the Turks at Temesware, and his scattered troops some one way, some another. The Prince understanding of this so sudden and unexpected accident, only accompanied with an hundred of his Gentry and Nobility, went into the camp to Busca, to let him know, how ignorant he was of his Liestenants' error, that had done it without his direction or knowledge, freely offering to perform what was concluded by his Ambassadors with the Emperor; Sigismundus yieldeth his country to E●s●a. and so causing all his Garrisons to come out of their strong holds, he delivered all to Busca for the Emperor, and so went to Prague, where he was honourably received, and established in his possessions, as his Imperial Majesty had promised. Busca assembling all the Nobility, took their oaths of allegiance and fidelity, and thus their Prince being gone, Trasilvania became again subject to the Emperor. Now after the death of Michael, Busca assisteth Rodoll in Wallachia. Vavoyd of Wallachia, the Turk sent one jeremy to be their Vavoyd or Prince; whose insulting tyranny caused the people to take Arms against him, so that he was forced to fly into the confines of Moldavia; and Busca in the behalf of the Emperor, proclaimed the Lord Rodoll in his stead. But jeremy having assembled an Army of forty thousand Turks, Tartars, and Moldavians, returned into Wallachia. Rodoll not yet able to raise such a power, fled into Transilvania to Busca, his ancient friend; who considering well of the matter, and how good it would be for his own security to have Wallachia subject to the Emperor, or at least such an employment for the remainders of the old Regiments of Sigismundus, (of whose greatness and true affection he was very suspicious,) sent them with Rodoll to recover Wallachia, conducted by the valiant Captains, the Earl Meldritch, Earl Veltus, Earl Nederspolt, Earl Zarvana, the Lord Bechlefield, the Lord Budendorfe, with their Regiments, and diverse others of great rank and quality, the greatest friends and alliances the Prince had; who with thirty thousand, marched along by the river Altus, to the straits of Rebrinke, where they entered Wallachia, encamping at Raza; jeremy lying at Argish, drew his Army into his old camp, in the plains of Peteske, and with his best diligence fortified it, intending to defend himself till more power came to him from the Crym-Tartar. Many small parties that came to his camp, Rodoll cut off, and in the nights would cause their heads to be thrown up and down before the trenches. Seven of their Porters were taken, whom jeremy commanded to be stayed quick, and after hung their skins upon poles, and their carcases and heads on stakes by them. CHAP. X. The battle of Rotenton; a pretty stratagem of fireworks by Smith. ROdoll not knowing how to draw the enemy to battle, raised his Army, burning and spoiling all where he came, and returned again towards Rebrinke in the night, as if he had fled upon the general rumour of the Crym-Tartars coming, which so inflamed the Turks of a happy victory, they urged jeremy against his will to follow them. Rodoll seeing his plot fell out as he desired, so ordered the matter, that having regained the straits, he put his Army in order, that had been near two days pursued, with continual skirmishes in his Rear, A battle betwixt Rodoll and jeremy. which now making head against the enemy, that followed with their whole Army in the best manner they could, was furiously charged with six thousand Hydukes, Wallachians, and Moldavians, led by three Colonels, Oversall, Dubras, and Calab, to entertain the time till the rest came up; Veltus and Nederspolt with their Regiments, entertained them with the like courage, till the Zanzacke Hamesbeg, with six thousand more, came with a fresh charge, which Meldritch and Budendorfe, rather like enraged lions, than men, so bravely encountered, as if in them only had consisted the victory; Meldritchs horse being slain under him, the Turks pressed what they could to have taken him prisoner, but being remounted, it was thought with his own hand he slew the valiant Zanzacke, whereupon his troops retiring, the two proud Pashas, Aladin, and Zizimmus, brought up the front of the body of their battle. Veltus and Nederspolt having breathed, and joining their troops with Becklefield and Zarvana, with such an incredible courage charged the left flank of Zizimmus, as put them all in disorder, where Zizimmus the Bashaw was taken prisoner, but died presently upon his wounds. jeremy seeing now the main battle of Rodoll advance, being thus constrained, like a valiant Prince in his front of the Vanguard, by his example so bravely encouraged his soldiers, that Rodoll found no great assurance of the victory. Thus being joined in this bloody massacre, that there was scarce ground to stand upon, but upon the dead carcases, which in less than an hour were so mingled, as if each Regiment had singled out other. The admired Aladin that day did leave behind him a glorious name for his valour, whose death many of his enemies did lament after the victory, which at that instant sell to Rodoll. It was reported jeremy was also slain, but it was not so, but fled with the remainder of his Army to Moldavia, leaving five and twenty thousand dead in the field, of both Armies. Wallachia subjected to the Emperor. And thus Rodoll was seated again in his Sovereignty, and Wallachia became subject to the Emperor. But long he rested not to settle his new estate, but there came news, that certain Regiments of straggling Tartars, were foraging those parts towards Moldavia. Meldritch with thirteen thousand men was sent against them, but when they heard it was the Crym-Tartar and his two sons, with an Army of thirty thousand; and jeremy, that had escaped with fourteen or fifteen thousand, lay in ambush for them about Langanaw, he retired towards Rottenton, a strong garrison for Rodoll; but they were so environed with these hellish numbers, they could make no great haste for skirmishing with their scouts, foragers, and small parties that still encountered them. But one night amongst the rest, having made a passage through a wood, with an incredible expedition, cutting trees thwart each other to hinder their passage, in a thick fog early in the morning, unexpectedly they met two thousand loaded with pillage, and two or three hundred horse and cattle; the most of them were slain and taken prisoners, who told them where jeremy lay in the passage, expecting the Crym-Tartar that was not far from him. Meldritch intending to make his passage perforce, was advised of a pretty stratagem by the English Smith, which presently he thus accomplished; for having accommodated two or three hundred trunks with wild fire, upon the heads of lances, and charging the enemy in the night, gave fire to the trunks, which blazed forth such flames and sparkles, that it so amazed not only their horses, but their foot also; that by the means of this fl●ming encounter, their own horses turned tails with such fury, as by their violence overthrew jeremy & his Army, without any loss at all to speak of to Meldritch. But of this victory long they triumphed not; for being within three leagues of Rottenton, the Tartar with near forty thousand so beset them, that they must either fight, or be cut in pieces flying. Here Busca and the Emperor had their desire; for the Sun no sooner displayed his beams, than the Tartar his colours; where at midday he stayed a while, to see the passage of a tyrannical and treacherous imposture, till the earth did blush with the blood of honesty, that the Sun for shame did hide himself, from so monstrous sight of a cowardly calamity. It was a most brave sight to see the banners and ensigns streaming in the air, the glittering of Armour, the variety of colours, the motion of plumes, the forests of lances, and the thickness of shorter weapons, till the silent expedition of the bloody blast from the murdering Ordnance, whose roaring voice is not so soon heard, as felt by the aimed at object, which made among them a most lamentable slaughter. CHAP. XI. The names of the English that were slain in the battle of Rottenton; and how Captain Smith is taken prisoner; and sold for a slave. IN the valley of Veristhorne, betwixt the river of Altus, and the mountain of Rottenton, was this bloody encounter, where the most of the dearest friends of the noble Prince Sigismundus perished. Meldritch having ordered his eleven thousand in the best manner he could, at the ●oot of the mountain upon his flanks, and before his front, he had pitched sharp stakes, their heads hardened in the fire, and bend against the enemy, as three battalion of Pikes, amongst the which also there was digged many small holes. The battle of Rottenton. Amongst those stakes was ranged his footmen, that upon the charge was to retire, as there was occasion. The Tartar having ordered his 40000. for his best advantage, appointed Mustapha Bashaw to begin the battle, with a general shout, all their Ensigns displaying, Drums beating, Trumpets and Howboyes sounding. Nederspolt and Mavazo with their Regiments of horse most valiantly encountered, and forced them to retire; the Tartar Begolgi with his Squadrons, darkening the skies with their flights of numberless arrows, who was as bravely encountered by Veltus and Oberwin, which bloody slaughter continued more than an hour, till the matchless multitude of the Tartars so increased, that they retired within their Squadrons of stakes, as was directed. The bloody Tartar, as scorning he should st●y so long for the victory, with his massy troops prosecuted the charge: but it was a wonder to see how horse and man came to the ground among the stakes, whose disordered troops were there so mangled, that the Christians with a loud shout cried Victoria; and with five or six field pieces, planted upon the rising of the mountain, did much hurt to the enemy that still continued the battle with that fury, that Meldritch seeing there was no possibility long to prevail, joined his small troops in one body, resolved directly to make his passage or die in the conclusion; and thus in gross gave a general charge, and for more than half an hour made his way plain before him, till the main battle of the Crym-Tartar with two Regiments of Turks and janissaries so overmatched them, that they were overthrown. The night approaching, the Earl with some thirteen or fourteen hundred horse, swam the River, some were drowned, all the rest slain or taken prisoners: And thus in this bloody field, near 30000. lay, some headless, armless and leglesse, all cut and mangled; where breathing their last, they gave this knowledge to the world, that for the lives of so few, the Crym-Tartar never paid dearer. But now the Countries of Transilvania and Wallachia, (subjected to the Emperor) and Sigismundus that brave Prince his Subject and Pensioner, the most of his Nobility, brave Captains and Soldiers, became a prey to the cruel devouring Turk: where had the Emperor been as ready to have assisted him, and those three Armies led by three such worthy Captains, as Michael, Busca, and Himself, and had those three Armies joined together against the Turk, Extracted out of a Book entitled, The warns of Hungaria, Wall●●hia, and Moldavia, written by Francisco F●rneza, a learned Italian, the Prince's Secretary, and translated by Mr. purchas. let all men judge, how happy it might have been for all Christendom: and have either regained Bulgaria, or at least have beat him out of Hungaria, where he hath taken much more from the Emperor, than hath the Emperor from Transilvania. In this dismal battle, where Nederspolt, Veltus, Zarvana, Mavazo, Bavell, and many other Earls, Barons, Colonels, Captains, brave Gentlemen, and Soldiers were slain. Give me leave to remember the names of our own Countrymen with him in those exploits, The English men in this Battle. that as resolutely as the best in the defence of Christ and his Gospel, ended their days, as Bask●rfield, Hardwicke, Thomas Milemer, Robert Mullineux, Thomas Bishop, Francis Compton, George Davison, Nicholas Williams, and one john a Scot, did what men could do, and when they could do no more, left there their bodies in testimony of their minds; only Ensign Carleton and Sergeant Robinson escaped: but Smith among the slaughtered dead bodies, and many a gasping soul, with toil and wounds lay groaning among the rest, till being found by the Pillagers he was able to live, and perceiving by his armour & habit, his ransom might be better to them, than his death, they led him prisoner with many others; well they used him till his wounds were cured, and at Axopolis they were all sold for slaves, like beasts in a marketplace, where every Merchant, viewing their limbs and wounds, caused other slaves to struggle with them, to try their strength, he fell to the share of Bashaw Bogall, who sent him forthwith to Adrinopolis, so for Constantinople to his fair Mistress for a slave. By twenty and twenty chained by the necks, they marched in file to this great City, where they were delivered to their several Masters, and he to the young Charatza Tragabig zanda. CHAP. XII. How Captain Smith was sent prisoner thorough the Black and Dissabacca Sea in Tartary; the description of those Seas, and his usage. This Noble Gentlewoman took sometime occasion to show him to some friends, or rather to speak with him, because she could speak Italian, would feign herself sick when she should go to the Banians, or weep over the graves, to know how Bogall took him prisoner; and if he were as the Bashaw writ to her, a Bohemian Lord conquered by his hand, as he had many others, which ere long he would present her, whose ransoms should adorn her with the glory of his conquests. But when she heard him protest he knew no such matter, nor ever saw Bogall till he bought him at Axopolis, and that he was an Englishman, only by his adventures made a Captain in those Countries. To try the truth, she found means to find out many could speak English, French, Dutch, and Italian, to whom relating most part of these former passages he thought necessary, which they so honestly reported to her, she took (as it seemed) much compassion on him; but having no use for him, left her mother should sell him, she sent him to her brother, the Tymor Bashaw of Nalbrits, in the Country of Cambia, a Province in Tartary. Here now let us remember his passing in this speculative course from Constantinople by Saunder, Screwe, Panassa, Musa, Lastilla, to Varna, How he was sent into Tartary. an ancient City upon the Black Sea. In all which journey, having little more liberty, than his eyes judgement since his captivity, he might see the Towns with their short Towers, and a most plain, fertile, and delicate Country, especially that most admired place of Greece, now called Romania, but from Varna, nothing but the Black Sea water, 〈◊〉 he came to the two Capes of Taur and Pergilos, where he passed the Strait of Niger, which (as he conjectured) is some ten leagues long, and three broad, betwixt two low lands, the Channel is deep, but at the entrance of the Sea Dissabacca, The description of the Dissabacca Sea. their are many great Osie-shou●ds, and many great black ro●kes, which the Turks said were trees, weeds, and mud, thrown from the inland Countries, by the inundations and violence of the Current, and cast there by the Eddy. They sailed by many low Isles, and saw many more of those muddy ro●kes, and nothing else, but salt water, till they came betwixt Susax and Curuske, only two white towns at the entrance of the river Bruapo appeared: In six or seven days sail, he saw four or five seeming strong castles of stone, with flat tops and battlements about them, but arriving at Cambia, he was (according to their custom) well used. The river was there more than half a mile broad. The Castle was of a large circumference, foure●●ene or fifteen foot thick, in the foundation some six foot from the wall, is a Paliizado, and then a Ditch of about forty foot broad full of water. On the west side of it, is a Town all of low flat houses, which as be conceived could be of no great strength, yet it keeps all them barbarous Countries about it in admiration and subjection. After he had stayed there three days; it was two days more before his guides brought him to Nalbrits, where the Tymor then was resident, in a great vast stony Castle with many great Courts about it, environed with high stone walls, where was quartered their Arms, when they first subjected those Countries, which only live to labour for those tyrannical Turks. Smith his usage in Tar●●ria. To her unkind brother, this kind Lady writ so much for his good usage, that he half suspected, as much as she intended; for she told him, he should there but sojourn to learn the language, and what it was to be a Turk, till time made her Master of herself. But the Tymor her brother, diverted all this to the worst of cruelty, for within an hour● after his arrival, he caused his Drub-man to strip him naked, and shave his head and beard so bare as his hand, a great ring of iron, with a long stalk bowed like a sickle, riveted about his neck, and a coat made of Vlgries' hair, guarded about with a piece of an undressed skin. There were many more Christian slaves, and near an hundred Forsadoes of Turks and Moors, and he being the last, was slave of slaves to them all. Among these slavish fortunes there was no great choice; for the best was so bad, a dog could hardly have lived to endure, and yet for all their pains and labours no more regarded than a beast. CHAP. XIII. The Turks diet; the Slave's diet; the attire of the Tartars; and manner of Wars and Religions, etc. The Tymors' diet of Cambia is as the Turks. THe Tymor and his friends fed upon Pillaw, which is boiled Rice and Garnances, with little bits of mutton or Buckones, which is roasted pieces of Horse, Bull, Vlgrie, or any beasts. Samboyses and Muselbit▪ are great dainties, and yet but round pies, full of all sorts of flesh they can get chopped with variety of herbs. Their best drink is Coffa, of a grain they call Coava, boiled with water; and Sherbecke, which is only honey and water; M●res milk, or the milk of any beast, they hold restorative: but all the Commonalty drink pure water. The Slave's diet. Their bread is made of this Coava, which is a kind of black whea●, and Cuskus a small white seed like Millya in Biskay: but our common victual, the entrailes of Horse and Vlgries; of this cut in small pieces, they will fill a great Cauldron, and being boiled with Cuskus, and put in great bowls in the form of chaffing-dishes, they sit round about it on the ground, after they have raked it thorough so oft as they please with their soul fists, the remainder was for the Christian slaves. Some of this broth they would temper with Cuskus pounded, and putting the fire off from the hearth, pour there a bowl full, then cover it with co●les till it be baked, which stewed with the remainder of the broth, and some small pieces of flesh, was an extraordinary dainty. The better sort are attired like Turks, The Attire o● those Tartars. but the plain Tartar hath a black sheep skin over his back, and two of the legs tied about his neck; the other two about his middle, with another over his belly, and the legs tied in the like manner behind him: then two more made like a pair of bases, serveth him for breeches; with a little close cap to his skull of black felt, and they use exceeding much of this felt, for carpets, for bedding, for Coats, and Idols. Their houses are much worse than your Irish, but the Inland Countries have none but Carts and Tents, which they ever remove from Country to Country, as they see occasion, driving with them infinite troops of black sheep, cattle and Vlgries, eating all up before them, as they go. For the Tartars of Nagi, they have neither Town, nor house, corn, The Tartars of Nagi and their manners. nor drink; but flesh and milk. The milk they keep in great skins like Burrachoes, which though it be never so sour, it agreeth well with their strong stomaches. They live all in Hordias, as doth the Crim-Tartars, three or four hundred in a company, in great Carts fifteen or sixteen foot broad, which is covered with small rods, wattled together in the form of a birds nest turned upwards, and with the ashes of bones tempered with oil, Camel's hair, and a clay they have: they lome them so well, that no weather will pierce them, and yet very light. Each Hordia hath a Murse, which they obey as their King. Their Gods are infinite. One or two thousand of those glittering white Carts drawn with Camels, Dear, Bulls, and Vlgries, they bring round in a ring, where they pitch their Camp; and the Murse, with his chief alliances, are placed in the midst. They do much hurt when they can get any Stroggs, which are great boats used upon the river Volga, (which they call Edle) to them that dwell in the Country of Perolog, and would do much more, were it not for the Muscovites Garrisons that there inhabit. CHAP. XIIII. The description of the Crym-Tartars; their houses and carts; their Idolatry in their lodgings. NOw you are to understand, The description of the Crym-Tartars Court. Tartary and Scythia are all one, but so large and spacious, few or none could ever perfectly describe it, nor all the several kinds of those most barbarous people that inhabit it. Those we call the Crym-Tartars, border upon Moldavia, Podolia, Lituania, and Russia, are much more regular than the interior parts of Scythia. This great Tartarian Prince, that hath so troubled all his neighbours, they always call Chan, which signifieth Emperor; but we, the Crym-Tartar. He liveth for most part in the best champion plains of many Provinces; and his removing Court is like a great City of houses and tents, drawn on Carts, all so orderly placed East and West, on the right and left hand of the Prince his house, which is always in the midst towards the South, before which none may pitch their houses, every one knowing their order and quarter, His houses and carts. as in an Army. The Prince's houses are very artificially wrought, both the foundation, sides, and roof of wickers, ascending round to the top like a Dove-coat; this they cover with white felt, or white earth tempered with the powder of bones, that it may shine the whiter; sometimes with black felt, curiously painted with vines, trees, birds, and beasts; the breadth of the Carts are eighteen or twenty foot, but the house stretcheth four or five foot over each side, and is drawn with ten or twelve, or for more state, twenty Camels and Oxen. Baskets. They have also great baskets, made of smaller wickers like great chests, with a covering or the same, all covered over with black felt, rubbed over with tallow and sheep's milk, to keep out the rain; prettily bedecked with painting or feathers; in those they put their household stuff and treasure, drawn upon other carts for that purpose. When they take down their houses, they set the door always towards the South, and their carts thirty or forty foot distant on each side, East and West, as if they were two walls: the women also have most curious carts; every one of his wives hath a great one for herself, and so many other for her attendants, that they seem as many Courts, as he hath wives. One great Tartar or Nobleman, will have for his particular, more than an hundred of those houses and carts, for his several offices and uses, but set so far from each other, they will seem like a great village. Their idolatry in their lodgings. Having taken their houses from the carts, they place the Master always towards the North; over whose head is always an Image like a Puppet, made of felt, which they call his brother; the women on his left hand, and over the chief Mistress her head, such another brother, and between them a little one, which is the keeper of the house; at the good wives beds-feet is a kids skin, stuffed with wool, and near it a Puppet looking towards the Maids; next the door another, with a dried cow's udder, for the women that milk the kine, because only the men milk mares; every morning those Images in their orders they besprinkle with that they drink, be it Cossmos, Cossmos is M●●e● m●●ke. or whatsoever, but all the white mare's milk is reserved for the Prince. Then without the door, thrice to the South, every one bowing his knee in honour of the fire; then the like to the East, in honour of the air; then to the West, in honour of the water; and lastly to the North, in behalf of the dead. After the servant hath done this duty to the four quarters of the world, he returns into the house, where his fellows stand waiting, ready with two cups and two basons to give their master, and his wife that lay with him 〈◊〉 night, to wash and drink, who must keep him company all the day following; and all his other wives come thither to drink, where he keeps his house that day; and all the gifts presented him till night, are laid up in her chests; and at the door a bench full of cups, and drink for any of them to make merry. Chap. XV. Their feasts; common diet; Princes estate; buildings; tributes; laws; slaves; entertainment of Ambassadors. FOr their feasts they have all sorts of beasts, birds, fish, fruits, Their feasts. and herbs they can get, but the more variety of wild ones is the best; to which they have excellent drink made of rice, millit, and honey, like wine; they have also wine, but in Summer they drink most Cossmos, that standeth ready always at the entrance of the door, and by it a fiddler; when the master of the house beginneth to drink, they all cry, ha, ha, and the fiddler plays, than they all clap their hands and dance, the men before their Masters, the women before their Mistresses; and ever when he drinks, they cry as before; then the fiddler stayeth till they drink all round; sometimes they will drink for the victory; and to provoke one to drink, they will pull him by the ears, and lug and draw him, to stretch and heat him, clapping their hands, stamping with their feet, and dancing before the champions, offering them cups, then draw them back again to increase their appetite; and thus continue till they be drunk, or their drink done, which they hold an honour, and no infirmity. Though the ground be fertile, they sow little corn, Their common diet. yet the Gentlemen have bread and hony-wine; grapes they have plenty, and wine privately, and good flesh & fish; but the common sort stamped millit, mingled with milk and water. They call Cassa for meat, and drink any thing; also any beast unprofitable for service they kill, when they are like to die, or however they die; they will eat them, guts liver and all; but the most fleshy parts they cut in thin slices, and hang it up in the Sun and wind wihout salting, where it will dry so hard, it will not putrify in a long time. A Ram they esteem a great feast among forty or fifty, which they cut in pieces boiled or roast, puts it in a great bowl with salt and water, for other sauce they have none; the master of the feast giveth every one a piece, which he eateth by himself, or carrieth away with him. How they become populous. Thus their hard fare makes them so infinite in cattle, and their great number of captived women to breed upon, makes them so populous. But near the Christian frontiers, the base sort make little cottages of wood, called Vlusi, daubed over with dirt, and beasts dung covered with sedge; yet in Summer they leave them, beginning their progress in April, with their wives, children, and slaves, in their carted houses, scarce convenient for four or five persons; driving their flocks towards Perecopya, and sometimes into Taurica, or Osow, a town upon the river Tanais, which is great and swift, where the Turk hath a garrison; and in October return again to their Cottages. Their Clothes are the skins of dogs, goats, and sheep, lined with cotton cloth, made of their finest wool, for of their worst they make their felt, which they use in abundance, as well for shoes and caps, as houses, beds, and Idols; also of the corpse wool mingled with horse hair, they make all their cordage. Their Prince's state. Notwithstanding this wand'ring life, their Princes sit in great state upon beds, or carpits, and with great reverence are attended both by men and women, and richly served in plate, and great silver cups, delivered upon the knee, attired in rich furs, lined with plush, or taffety, or robes of tissue. These Tartars possess many large and goodly plains, wherein feed innumerable herds of horse and cattle, as well wild as tame; which are Elkes, Bisones, Horses, Dear, Sheep, Goats, Swine, Bears, and diverse others. Ancient buildings. In those countries are the ruins of many fair Monasteries, Castles, and Cities, as Bacasaray, Salutium, Almassary, Perecopya, Cremum, Sedacom, Capha, and diverse others by the Sea, but all kept with strong garrisons for the great Turk, who yearly by trade or traffic, receiveth the chief commodities those fertile countries afford, as Bezer, Rice, Furs, Hides, Commodities for tribute to the Turk. Butter, Salt, Cattell, and Slaves, yet by the spoils they get from the secure and idle Christians, they maintain themselves in this Pomp. Also their wives, of whom they have as many as they will, very costly, yet in a constant custom with decency. Go●d laws, yet no lawyers. They are Mahometans, as are the Turks, from whom also they have their Laws, but no Lawyers, nor Attorneys, only judges, and justices in every Village, or Hordia; but capital criminals, or matters of moment, before the Chan himself, or Privy Counsels, of whom they are always heard, and speedily discharged; for any may have access at any time to them, before whom they appear with great reverence, adoring their Princes as Gods, and their spiritual judges as Saints; for justice is with such integrity and expedition executed, without covetousness, bribery, partiality, and brawling, that in six months they have sometimes scarce six causes to hear. About the Princes court none but his guard wears any weapon, but abroad they go very strong, because there are many bandytoes, and Thiefs. Their slaves. They use the Hungarians, Russians, Wallachians, and Moldavian slaves (whereof they have plenty) as beasts to every work; and those Tartars that serve the Chan, or noblemen, have only victual and apparel, the rest are generally nasty, and idle, naturally miserable, and in their wars better thiefs than soldiers, Th●s Chan hath yearly a Donative from the King of Poland, 〈…〉. the Dukes of Lituania, Moldavia, and Nagagon Tartars; their Messengers commonly he useth bountifully, and very nobly, but sometimes most cruelly; when any of them doth bring their Presents, by his household Officers they are entertained in a plain field, with a moderate proportion of flesh, bread and wine, for once; but when they come before him, the Sultaines, Tuians, Vlans, Marhies, his chief Officers and Councillors attend, one man only bringeth the Ambassador to the Court gate, but to the Chan he is led between two Councillors; where saluting him upon their bended knees, declaring their message, are admitted to eat with him, and presented with a great silver cup full of Mead from his own hand, but they drink it upon their knees: when they aredispatched, he invites them again, the feast ended, they go back a little from the Palace door, and rewarded with silk Vestures wrought with gold down to their ankles, with an horse or two, and sometimes a slave of their own Nation; in them robes presently they come to him again, to give him thanks, take their leave, and so depart. CHAP. XVI. How he levieth an Army; their Arms and Provision; how he divideth the spoil; and his service to the Great Turk. WHen he intends any wars, How he levieth an Army. he must first have leave of the Great Turk, whom he is bound to assist when he commandeth, receiving daily for himself and chief of his Nobility, pensions from the Turk, that holds all Kings but slaves, that pay tribute or are subject to any: signifying his intent to all his subjects, within a month commonly he raiseth his Army, and every man is to furnish himself for three months victuals, which is parched Millit, or ground to meal, which they ordinarily mingle with water (as is said) hard cheese or cruds dried, and beaten to powder, a little will make much water like milk, and dried flesh, this they put also up in sacks: The Chan and his Nobles have some bread and Aquavitae, and quick cattle to kill when they please, wherewith very sparingly they are contented. Being provided with expert Guides, and got into the Country he intends to invade, he sends forth his Scouts to bring in what prisoners they can, from whom he will wrest the utmost of their knowledge fit for his purpose: having advised with his Council, what is most fit to be done, the Nobility, according to their antiquity, doth march; then moves he with his whole Army: if he find there is no enemy to oppose him, he adviseth how far they shall invade, commanding every man (upon pain of his life) to kill all the obvious Rustics; but not to hurt any women, or children. Ten, or fifteen thousand, he commonly placeth, The manner of his wars. where he findeth most convenient for his standing Camp; the rest of his Army he divides in several troops, bearing ten or twelve miles square before them, and ever within three or four days return to their Camp, putting all to fire and sword, but that they carry with them back to their Camp; and in this scattering manner he will invade a Country, and be gone with his prey, with an incredible expedition. But if he understand of an enemy, he will either fight in Ambuscado, or fly; for he will never fight any battle if he can choose, but upon treble advantage; yet by his innumerable flights of arrows, I have seen fly from his flying troops, we could not well judge, whether his fight or flying was most dangerous, so good is h●s horse, and so expert his bowmen; but if they be so entangled they must fight, there is none can be more hardy, or resolute in their defences. Regaining his own borders, How he divides the spoil. he takes the tenth of the principal captives, man, woman, child, or beast (but his captains that t●ke them, will accept of some particular person they best like for themselves) the rest are divided amongst the whole Army, according to every man's desert, and quality; that they keep them, or sell them to who will give most; but they will not forget to use all the means they can, to know their estates, friends, and quality, and the better they find you, the worse they will use you, till you do agree to pay such a ransom, as they will impose upon you; therefore many great persons have ●ndured much misery to conceal themselves, because their ransoms areso intolerable: their best hope is of some Christian Agent, that many times cometh to redeem slaves, either with money, or man for man; those Agents knowing so well the extreme covetousness of the Tartars, do use to bribe some jew or Merchant, that feigning they will sell them again to some other nation, are oft redeemed for a very small ransom. How the Chan doth serve the great Turk. But to this Tartarian Army, when the Turk commands, he goeth with some small artillery; and the Nagagians, Perecopens, Crimes, Osovens, and Cersessians, are his tributaries; but the Petigorves, Oczaconians, Byalogordens, and Dobrucen Tartars, the Turk by covenant commands to follow him, so that from all those Tartars he hath had an Army of an hundred and twenty thousand excellent, swift, stomachful Tartarian horse, for foot they have none. Now the Chan, his Sultaines and nobility, use Turkish, Caramanian, Arabian, Parthian, and other strange Tartarian horses; the swiftest they esteem the best; seldom they feed any more at home, than they have present use for; but upon their plains is a short wood like heath, in some countries like gale, full of berries, far much better than any grass. Their Arms. Their Arms are such as they have surprised or got from the Christians or Persians, both brest-plates, swords, semiteres, and helmets; bows and arrows they make most themselves, also their bridles and saddles are indifferent, but the nobility are very handsome, and well armed like the Turks, in whom consisteth their greatest glory; the ordinary sort have little armour, some a plain young pole unshaven, headed with a piece of iron for a lance; some an old Christian pike, or a Turks cavatine; yet those tattertimallions will have two or three horses, some four or five, as well for service, as for to eat; which makes their Armies seem thrice so many as there are soldiers. The Chan himself hath about his person ten thousand chosen Tartars and janissaries, some small Ordnance, and a white mare's tail, with a piece of green taffety on a great Pike, is carried before him for a standard; because they hold no beast so precious as a white mare, whose milk is only for the King & nobility, and to sacrifice to their Idols; but the rest have ensigns of dive●s colours. For all this miserable knowledge, furniture, and equipage, th● mischief they do in Christendom is wonderful, by reason of their hardness of life and constitution, obedience, agility, and their Emperor's bounty, honours, grace, and dignities he ever bestoweth upon those, that have done him any memorable service in the face of his enemies. The Caspian Sea, A description of the Caspian Sea. most men agree that have passed it, to be in length about 200. leagues, and in breadth an hundred & fifty, environed to the East, with the great deserts of the Tartars of Turkamane; to the West, by the Circasses, and the mountain Caucasus; to the North, by the river Volga, and the land of Nagay; and to the South, by Media, and Persia: this sea is fresh water in many places, in others as salt as the great Ocean; it hath many great rivers which fall into it, as the mighty river of Volga, which is like a sea, running near two thousand miles, through many great and large Countries, that send into it many other great rivers; also out of Saberya, Yaick, and Yem, out of the great mountain Caucasus, the river Sirus, Arash, and diverse others, yet no Sea nearer it than the black Sea, which is at least an hundred leagues distant: in which Country live the Georgians, now part Armenians, part Nestorians; it is neither found to increase or diminish, or empty itself any way, except it be under ground, and in some places they can find no ground at two hundred fathom. Many other most strange and wonderful things are in the land of Cathay towards the North-east, and China towards the Southeast, where are many of the most famous Kingdoms in the world; where most arts, plenty, and curiosities are in such abundance, as might seem incredible, which hereafter I will relate, as I have briefly gathered from such authors as have lived there. CHAP. XVII. How captain Smith escaped his captivity; slew the Bashaw of Nalbrits in Cambia; his passage to Russia, Transilvania, and the midst of Europe to Africa. ALL the hope he had ever to be delivered from this thraldom, How Smith es●●▪ his captivity. was only the love of Tragabigzanda, who surely was ignorant of his bad usage; for although he had often debated the matter with some Christians, that had been there a long time slaves, they could not find how to make an escape, by any reason or possibility; but God beyond man's expectation or imagination helpeth his servants when they least think of help, as it happened to him. So long he lived in this miserable estate, as he became a thresher at a grange in a great field, more than a league from the Tymors house; the Bashaw as he oft used to visit his granges, visited him, and rock occasion so to beat, spurn, and revile him, that forgetting all reason, he beat out the Tymors brains with his threshing bat, for they have no flails; and seeing his estate could be no worse than it was, clothed himself in his clothes, hid his body under the straw, filled his knapsack with corn, shut the doors, mounted his horse, and ran into the desert at all adventure; two or three days thus fearfully wand'ring he knew not whither, and well it was he met not any to ask the way; being even as taking l●ave of this miserable world, God did direct him to the great way or Castragan, as they call it, which doth cross these large territories, and generally known among them by these marks. Their guides in those Countries. In every crossing of this great way is planted a post, and in it so many bobs with broad ends, as there be ways, and every bob the figure painted on it, that demonstrateth to what part that way leads; as that which pointeth towards the Cryms Country, is marked with a half Monne, if towards the Georgians and Persia, a black man, full of white spots, if towards China, the picture of the Sun, if towards Muscovia, the sign of a Cross, if towards the habitation of any other Prince, the figure whereby his standard is known. To his dying spirits thus God added some comfort in this melancholy journey, wherein if he had met any of that vild generation, they had made him their slave, or knowing the figure engraven in the iron about his neck, (as all slaves have) he had been sent back again to his master; sixteen days he traveled in this fear and torment, after the Cross, till he arrived at Aecopolis, upon the river Don, a garrison of the Muscovites. The governor after due examination of those his hard events, took off his irons, and so kindly used him, he thought himself new risen from death, and the good Lady Callamata, largely supplied all his wants. The description of Ca●bia, This is as much as he could learn of those wild Countries, and his passage to R●ssia. that the Country of Cambia is two days journey from the head of the great river Bruapo, which springeth from many places of the mountains of Innagachi, that join themselves together in the Pool Kerkas; which they account for the head, and falleth into the Sea Dissabacca, called by some the lake Meotis, which receiveth also the river Tanais, and all the rivers that fall from the great Countries of the Circassis, the Cartaches, and many from the Tauricaes, Precopes, Cummani, Cossunka, and the Crime; through which Sea he sailed, and up the river Bruapo to Nalbrits, and thence through the deserts of Circassi to Aecoplis, as is related; where he stayed with the Governor, till the Convoy went to Coraguaw; then with his certificate how he found him, and had examined with his friendly letters sent him by Zumalacke to Caragnaw, whose Governor in like manner so kindly use him, that by this means he went with a safe conduct to Letch, and Donka, in Cologoske, and thence to Berniske, and Newgrod in Seberia, by Rezechica, upon the river Niper, in the confines of Littuania; from whence with as much kindness he was convoyed in like manner by Coroski, Duberesko, Duzihell, Drohobus, and Ostroge in Volonis; Saslaw and Lasco in Podolia; Halico and Collonia in Polonia; and so to Hermonstat in Transilvania. In all his life he seldom met with more respect, mirth, content, and entertainment; and not any Governor where he came, but gave him somewhat as a present, besides his charges; seeing themselves as subject to the like calamity. His observations in his journey to Transilvania, through the midst of Europ●. Through those poor continually foraged Countries there is no passage, but with the Caravans or Convoys; for they are Countries rather to be pitied, than envied; and it is a wonder any should make wars for them. The Villages are only here and there a few houses of strait Fir trees, laid heads and points above one another, made fast by notches at the ends more than a man's height, and with broad split boards, pinned together with wooden pins, as thatched for coverture. In ten Villages you shall scarce find ten iron nails, except it be in some extraordinary man's house. For their Towns, Aecopolis, Letch, and D●nko, have rampiers made of that wooden walled fashion, double, and betwixt them earth and stones, but so latched with cross timber, they are very strong against any thing but fire; and about them a deep ditch, and a Palizado of young Fir trees: but most of the rest have only a great ditch cast about them, and the ditches earth is all their rampire; but round well environed with Palisades. Some have some few small pieces of small Ordnance, and slings, calievers, and muskets, but their generallest weapons are the Ruff bows and arrows; you shall find pavements over bogs, only of young Fir trees laid cross one over another, for two or three hours' journey, or as the passage requires, and yet in two days travel you shall scarce see six habitations. Notwithstanding to see how their Lords, Governors, and Captains are civilised, well attired and acoutred with jewels, Sables, and Horses, and after their manner with curious furniture, it is wonderful; but they are all Lords or slaves, which makes them so subject to every invasion. In Transilvania he found so many good friends, that but to see, and rejoice himself (after all those encounters) in his native Country, he would ever hardly have left them, though the mirror of virtue their Prince was absent. Being thus glutted with content, and near drowned with joy, he passed high Hungaria by Fileck, Tocka, Cassovia, and Vnderoroway, by Vlmicht in Moravia, to Prague in Bohemia; at last he found the most gracious Prince Sigismundus, with his Colonel at Lipswick in Misenland, who gave him his Pass, intimating the service he had done, and the honours he had received, with fifteen hundred ducats of gold to repair his losses: with this he spent some time to visit the fair Cities and Countries of Drasdon in Saxony, Magdaburgh and Brunswick; cassel in Hessen; Wittenberg, Vilum, and Minikin in Bavaria; Aughsbrough, and her Universities; Hama, Frankford, Mentz, the Palatinate; Worms, Speyre, and Strausborough; passing Nancie in Lorraine, and France by Paris to Orleans, he went down the river of Loyer, to Angiers, and embarked himself at Nantz in Britanny, for Bilbao in Biskay, to see Burgos-Valiadolid, the admired monastery of the Escurial, Madrill, Teledo, Cordua, Cuedyriall, Civil, Cherries, Cales, and Saint Lucas in Spain. CHAP. XVIII. The observations of Captain Smith; Mr. Henry Archer and others in Barbary. BEing thus satisfied with Europe and Asia, understanding of the wars in Barbary, he went from Gibraltar to Guta and Tanger, thence to Saffee, where growing into acquaintance with a French man of war, the Captain and some twelve more went to Morocco, to see the ancient monuments of that large renowned City: it was once the principal City in Barbary, situated in a goodly plain Country, 14. miles from the great Mount Atlas, and sixty miles from the Atlantic Sea; The three golden Balls of Affr●ca. but now little remaining, but the King's Palace, which is like a City of itself, and the Christian Church, on whose flat square steeple is a great brooch of iron, whereon is placed the three golden Balls of Africa: the first is near three els in circumference, the next above it somewhat less, the uppermost the least over them, at it were an half Ball, and over all a pretty guilded Pyramids. Against those golden Balls hath been shot many a shot, their weight is recorded 700. weight of pure gold, hollow within, yet no shot did ever hit them, nor could ever any Conspirator attain that honour as to get them down. They report the Prince of Morocco betrothed himself to the King's Daughter of Aethiopia, he dying before their marriage, she caused those three golden Balls to be set up for his Monument, The description of Morocco. and vowed virginity all her life. The Alfantica is also a place of note, because it is environed with a great wall, wherein lie the goods of all the Merchants securely guarded. The juderea is also (as it were) a City of itself, where dwell the jews: the rest for the most part is defaced: but by the many pinnacles and towers, with Balls on their tops, hath much appearance of much sumptuousness and curiosity. There have been many famous Universities, which are now but stables for Fowls & Beasts, & the houses in most parts lie tumbled one above another; the walls of Earth are with the great fresh floods washed to the ground; nor is there any village in it, but tents for Strangers, Larbes & Moors. Strange tales they will tell of a great Garden, wherein were all sorts of Bi●ds, Fishes, Beasts, Fruits & Fountains, which for beauty, Art and pleasure, exceeded any place known in the world, though now nothing but dunghills, Pigeon-houses, shrubs and bushes. There are yet many excellent fountains adorned with marble, and many arches, pillars, towers, ports and Temples, but most only relics of lamentable ruins and sad desolation. A bloody ●mpresle. When Mulai Hamet reigned in Barbary, he had three sons, Mulai Shecke, Mulai Sidan, and Mulai Befferres, be a most good and noble King, that governed well with peace and plenty, till his Empress, more cruel than any beast in Africa, poisoned him, her own daughter, Mulai Shecke his eldest son borne of a Portugal Lady, and his daughter, to bring Mulai Sidan to the Crown now reigning, which was the cause of all those brawls and wars that followed betwixt those Brothers, their children, and a Saint that start up, but he played the Devil. King Mulai Ha●et, ●t the Great Ze●ss of Barbar●e. King Mulai Hamet was not black, as many suppose, but Molata, or tawny, as are the most of his subjects; every way noble, kind and friendly, very rich and pompous in Sta●e and Majesty, though he sitteth not upon a Throne nor Chair of Estate, but cross legged upon a rich Carpet, as doth the Turk, whose Religion of Mahomet, with an incredible miserable curiosity they observe. His Ordinary Guard is at least 5000 but in progress he goeth not with less than 20000. horsemen, himself as rich in all his Equipage, as any Prince in Christendom, and yet a Contributor to the Turk. His great love to English m●n. In all his Kingdom were so few good Artificers, that he entertained from England, Goldsmiths, Plumbers, Carvers, and Polishers of stone, and Watch-makers, so much he delighted in the reformation of workmanship, he allowed each of them ten shillings a day standing fee, linen, woollen, silks; and what they would for diet and apparel, and custome-free to transport, or import what they would; for there were scarce any of those qualities in his Kingdoms, but those, of which there are diverse of them living at this present in London. Amongst the rest, one M●. Henry Archer, a Watchmaker, walking in Morocco, from the Alfantica to the juredea, the way being very foul, met a great Priest, or a Sante (as they call all great Clergymen) who would have thrust him into the dirt for the way; but Archer, not knowing what he was, gave him a box on the ear, presently he was apprehended and condemned to have his tongue cut out, and his hand cut off: but no sooner it was known at the King's Court, but 300. of his Guard came, and broke open the Prison, and delivered him, although the fact was next degree to Treason. Concerning this Archer, there is one thing more worth noting: The strange love of a Lyon. Not far from Mount Atlas, a great Lioness in the heat of the day, did use to bathe herself, and teach her young Puppies to swim in the river Cauzeff, of a good breadth; yet she would carry them one after another over the river; which some Moors perceiving watched their opportunity, and when the river was between her and them, stole four of her whelps, which she perceiving, with all the speed she could passed the river, and coming near them they let fall a whelp (and fled with the rest) which she took in her mouth, and so returned to the rest: a Male and a Female of those they gave Mr. Archer, who kept them in the King's Garden, till the Male killed the Female, than he brought, it up as a Puppy-dog lying upon his bed, till it grew so great as a Mastiff, and no dog more tame or gentle to them he knew: but being to return for England, at Saffee he gave him to a Merchant of Marseilles, that presented him to the French K●ng, who sent him to King james, where it was kept in the Tower seven years: After one Mr. john Bull, than servant to Mr. Archer, with diverse of his friends, went to see the Lions, not knowing any thing at all of him; yet this rare beast smelled him before he saw him, whining, groaning, and tumbling, with such an expression of acquaintance, that being informed by the Keeper's how-hee came thither; Mr. Bull so prevailed, the Keeper opened the grate, and Bull went in: But no Dog could fawn more on his Master, than the Lion on him, licking his feet, hands, and face, skipping and tumbling to and fro, to the wonder of all the beholders; being satisfied with his acquaintance, he made shift to get out of the grate. But when the Lion saw his friend gone, no beast by bellowing, roaring, scratching, and howling, could express more rage and sorrow, nor in four days after would he either eat or drink. Another kind Lion in Morocco. In Morocco, the King's Lions are all together in a Court, environed with a great high wall; to those they put a young Puppy-dogge: the greatest Lion had a sore upon his neck, which this Dog so licked that he was healed: the Lion defended him from the fury of all the rest, nor durst they eat till the Dog and he had fed; this Dog grew great, and lived amongst them many years after. The description of Fez. Fez also is a most large and plentiful Country, the chief City is called Fez, divided into two parts; old Fez, containing about 80. thousand households, the other 4000 pleasantly situated upon a River in the heart of Barbary, part upon hills, part upon plains, full of people, and all sorts of Merchandise. The great Temple is called Carucen, in breadth seventeen Arches, in length 120. borne up with 2500. white marble pillars: under the chief Arch, where the Tribunal is kept, hangeth a most huge lamp, compassed with 110. lesser, under the other also hang great lamps, and about some are burning fifteen hundred lights. They say they were all made of the bells the Arabians brought from Spain. It hath three gates of notable height, Priests and Officers so many, that the circuit of the Church, the Yard, and other houses, is little less than a mile and an half in compass; there are in this City 200. Schools, 200. Inns, 400. watermils, 600. water-Conduits, 700. Temples and Oratories; but fifty of them most stately and richly furnished. Their Alcazer or Burse is walled about, it hath twelve gates, and fifteen walks covered with tents, to keep the Sun from the Merchants, and them that come there. The King's Palace, both for strength and beauty is excellent, and the Citizens have many great privileges. Those two Countries of Fez and Morocco, are the best part of all Barbary, abounding with people, cattle, and all good necessaries for man's use. For the rest, as the Larbes, or Mountainers, the Kingdoms of Cocow, Algiers, Tripoli, Tunis, and Egypt; there are many large histories of them in diverse languages, A brief description of the most unknowen parts of Africa. especially that writ by that most excellent Statesman, john de Leo, who afterward turned Christian. The unknowen Countries of Ginny and Been, this six and twenty years have been frequented with a few English ships only to trade, especially the river of Senaga, by Captain Brimstead, Captain Brockit, Mr. Crump▪ and diverse others. Also the great river of Gambra, by Captain jobson, who is returned in thither again in the year 1626. with Mr. William Grent, and thirteen or fourteen others, to stay in the Country, to discover some way to those rich mines of Gago or Tumbatu, from whence is supposed the Moors of Barbary have their gold, and the certainty of those supposed descriptions and relations of those interior parts, which daily the more they are sought into, the more they are corrected. For surely, those interior parts of Africa are little known to either English, French, or Dutch, though they use much the Coast; therefore we will make a little bold with the observations of the portugals. CHAP. XIX. The strange discoveries and observations of the portugals in Africa. THe portugals on those pars have the glory, How the portugals coasted to the East Ind●es. who first coasting along this Western shore of Africa, to find passage to the East Indies, within this hundred and fifty years, even from the straits of Gibraltar, about the Cape of Bone Esperance to the Persian Gulf, and thence all along the Asian Coast to the Moluccas, have subjected many great Kingdoms, erected many Commonwealths, built many great and strong Cities; and where is it they have not been by trade or force? no not so much as Cape de Verd, and Sermleone; but most Bays or Rivers, where there is any trade to be had, especially gold, or conveniency for refreshment, but they are scattered; living so amongst those Blacks, by time and cunning they seem to be naturalised amongst them. As for the Isles of the Canaries, they have fair Towns, many Villages, and many thousands of people rich in commodities. Ordoardo Lopez, a noble Portugal, Anno Dom. 1578. Or Edward. embarking himself for Congo to trade, where he found such entertainment, finding the King much oppressed with enemies, he found means to bring in the portugals to assist him, whereby he planted there Christian Religion, and spent m●st of his life to bring those Countries to the Crown of Portugal, which he describeth in this manner. The Kingdom of Congo is about 600. miles' diameter any way, The Kingdom: of Congo. the chief City called St. Savadore, seated upon an exceeding high mountain, 150. miles from the Sea, very fertile, and inhabited with more than 100000. persons, where is an excellent prospect over all the plain Countries about it, well watered, lying (as it were) in the Centre of this Kingdom, over all which the portugals now command, though but an handful in comparison of Negroes. They have flesh and fruits very plentiful of diverse sorts. Wild Elephants. This Kingdom is divided into five Provinces, viz. Bamba, Sundi Pango, Batta and Pembo; but Bamba is the principal, and can afford 400000. men of war. Elephants are bred over all those Provinces, and of wonderful greatness; though some report they cannot kneel, nor lie down, they can do both, and have their joints as other creatures for use: with their fore-seet they will leap upon trees to pull down the boughs, and are of that strength, they will shake a great Cocar tree for the nuts, and pull down a good tree with their ruskes, to get the leaves to eat, as well as sedge and long grass, Cocar nuts and berries, etc. which with their trunk they put in their mouth, and chew it with their smaller teeth; in most of those Provinces, are many rich mines, but the Negars opposed the portugals for working in them. The Kingdom of Angola. The Kingdom of Angola is wonderful populous, and rich in mines of silver, copper, and most other metals; fruitful in all manner of food, and sundry sorts of cattle, but dogs fl●sh they love better than any other meat; they use few clothes, and no Armour; bows, arrows, and clubs, are their weapons. But the portugals are well armed against those engines, and do buy yearly of those Blacks more than five thousand slaves, and many are people exceeding well proportioned. The Kingdom of Anchicos. The Anchicos are a most valiant nation, but most strange to all about them. Their Arms are Bows, short and small, wrapped about with serpent's skins, of diverse colours, but so smooth you would think them all one with the wood, and it makes them very strong; their strings little twigs, but exceeding tough and flexible; their arrows short, which they shoot with an incredible quickness. They have short axes of brass and copper for swords; wonderful loyal and faithful, and exceeding simple, yet so active, they skip amongst the rocks like goats. They trade with them of Nubea, A strange money. and Congo, for Lamache, which is a small kind of shell fish, of an excellent azure colour, male and female, but the female they hold most pure; they value them at diverse prices, because they are of diverse sorts, and those they use for coin, to buy and sell, as we do gold and silver; nor will they have any other money in all those Countries, for which they give Elephants teeth; and slaves for salt, silk, linen cloth, glasse-beads, and such like Portugal commodities. A snambles of man's flesh. They circumcise themselves, and mark their faces with sundry flashes from their infancy. They keep a shambles of man's flesh, as if it were beef, or other victual; for when they cannot have a good market for their slaves; or their enemies they take, they kill, and sell them in this manner; some are so resolute, in showing how much they scorn death, they will offer themselves and slaves, to this butchery to their Prince and friends; and though there be many nations will eat their enemies, in America and Asia, yet none but those are known to be so mad, as to cat their slaves and friends also. Their religions and Idols. Religions and idols they have as many, as nations and humours; but the devil hath the greatest part of their devotions, whom all those Blacks do say is white; for there are no Saints but Blacks. Divers nations yet unknown, and the wonders of Africa. But besides those great Kingdoms of Congo, Angola, and Azichi, in those unfrequented parts are the kingdoms of Lango, Matania, Buttua, ●ofola, Mozambeche, Quivola, the Isle of Saint Laurence, Mombaza, Meli●da, the Empires of Monomatopa, Monemugi, and Presbyter john, with whom they have a kind of trade, and their rites, customs, climates, temperatures, and commodities by relation. Also of great Lakes, that deserve the names of Seas, and huge mountains of diverse sorts, as some scorched with heat, some covered with snow; the mountains of the Sun also of the Moon, some of crystal, some of iron, some of silver, and mountains of gold, with the original of Nilus; likewise sundry forts of cattle, fishes, Fowls, strange beasts, and monstrous serpents; for Africa was always noted to be a fruitful mother of such terrible creatures; who meeting at their watering places, which are but Ponds in desert places, in regard of the heat of the Country, and their extremities of nature, make strange copulations, and so engender those extraordinary monsters. Of all these you may read in the history of this Edward Lopez, translated into English by Abraham Hartwell, and dedicated to john Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, 1597. But because the particulars are most concerning the conversion of those Pagans, by a good poor Priest, that first converted a Noble man, to convert the King, and the rest of the Nobility; sent for so many Priests and ornaments into Portugal, to solemnize their baptisms with such magnificence, which was performed with such strange curiosities, that those poor Negroes adored them as Gods, till the Priest's grew to that wealth, a Bishop was sent to rule over them, which they would not endure, which endangered to spoil all before they could be reconciled. But not to trouble you too long with those rarities of uncertainties; let us return again to Barbary, where the wars being ended, and Befferres possessed of Morocco, and his father's treasure, a new bruit arose amongst them, that Mulai Sidan, was raising an Army against him, who after took his brother Befferres prisoner; but by reason of the uncertainty, and the perfidious, treacherous, bloody murders rather than war, amongst those perfidious, barbarous Moors, Smith returned with Merham, and the rest to Saffe, and so aboard his Ship, to try some other conclusions at Sea. CHAP. XX. A brave Sea fight betwixt two Spanish men of war, and Captain Merham, with Smith. MErham a captain of a man of war then in the Road, invited captain Smith, and two or three more of them aboard with him, where he spared not any thing he had to express his kindness, to bid them welcome, till it was too late to go on shore, so that necessity constrained them to stay aboard; a fairer Evening could not be, yet ere midnight such a storm did arise, they were forced to let slip Cable, and Anchor, and put to Sea; spooning before the wind, till they were driven to the Canaries; in the calms they accommodated themselves, hoping this strange accident might yet produce some good event; not long it was before they took a small Bark coming from Teneryf, loaded with Wine; three or four more they chased, two they took, but found little in them, save a few passengers, that told them of five Dutch men of war, about the Isles, so that they stood for Boyadora, upon the African shore, betwixt which and Cape Noa, they descried to sail. Merham intending to know what they were, hailed them; very civilly they dansed their topsailes, and desired the man of war to come aboard them, and take what he would, for they were buttwo poor distressed Bi●kiners. But Merham the old fox, seeing himself in the lion's paws, sprung his loufe, the other tacked after him, and came close up to his neither quarter, gave his broad side, and so loufed up to windward; the Vice-admiral did the like, and at the next bout, the Admiral with a noise of Trumpets, and all his Ordnance, murderers, and muskets, boarded him on his broad side; the other in like manner on his lay quarter, that it was so dark, there was little light, but fire and smoke; long he stayed not, before he fell off, leaving 4. or 5. of his men sprawling over the grating; after they had battered Merham about an hour, they boarded him again as before; and threw four kedgers or grapnalls in iron chains, then shearing off they thought so to have torn down the grating; but the Admiral's yard was so entangled in their shrouds, Merham had time to discharge two cross bar shot amongst them, and diverse bolts of iron made for that purpose, against his bow, that made such a breach, he feared they both should have sunk for company; so that the Spaniard was as you're in slipping his chained Grapnalls, as Merham was in cutting the tackling, kept fast their yards in his shrouds; the Vide-admiral presently cleared himself, but spared neither his Ordnance nor Muskets to keep Merham from getting away, till the Admiral had repaired his leak; from twelve at noon, till six at night, they thus interchanged one volley for another; then the Vide-admiral fell on starne, staying for the Admiral that came up again to him, and all that night stood after Merham, that shaped his course for Mamora, but such small way they made, the next morning they were not three leagues off from Cape Noa. The two Spanish men of war, for so they were, and well appointed, taking it in scorn as it seemed, with their chase, broad side, and starne, the one after the other, within Musket shot, plying their ordnance; and after an hours work commanded, Merham a main for the King of Spain upon fair quarter; Merham drank to them, and so discharged his quarter pieces: which pride the Spaniard to revenge, boarded him again, and many of them were got to the top to unsling the main sail, which the Master and some others from the round house, caused to their cost to come tumbling down; about the round house the Spaniards so pestered, that they were forced to the great Cablen and blew it up; the smoke and fire was so vehement, as they thought the Ship on fire; they in the fore castle were no less assaulted, that blew up a piece of the grating, with a great many of Spaniards more; then they cleared themselves with all speed, and Merham with as much expedition to quench the fire with w●t clothes and water, which began to grow too fast. The Spaniard still playing upon him with all the shot they could; the open places presently they covered with old sails, and prepared themselves to fight to the last man. The angry Spaniard seeing the fire quenched, hung out a flag of truce to have but a parley; but that desperate Merham knew there was but one way with him, and would have none, but the report of his Ordnance, which he did know well how to use for his best advantage. Thus they spent the next afternoon, and half that night, when the Spaniards either lost them, or left them. Seven and twenty men Merham had slain, and sixteen wounded, and could find they had received 140. great shot. A wounded Spaniard they kept alive confessed, they had lost 100 men in the Admiral, which they did fear would sink, ere she could recover a Port. Thus reaccommodating their sails, they sailed for Sancta Cruse, Cape Goa, and Magadore, ti●l they came again to Saffee, and then he returned into England. CHAP. XXI. The continuation of the general History of Virginia; the Summer Isles; and New England; with their present estate from 1624. to this present 1629. COncerning these Countries, I would be sorry to trouble you with repeating one thing twice, as with their Maps, Commodities, People, Government & Religion yet known, the beginning of those plantations, their numbers and names, with the names of the Adventurers, the yearly proceedings of every Governor both here and there. As for them misprisions, neglect, grievances, and the causes of all those rumours, losses and crosses that have happened; I refer you to the General History, where you shall find all this at large; especially to those pages, where you may read my letter of advice to the Council and Company, what of necessity must be done, or lose all and leave the Country, pag. 70. what commodities I sent home, pag. 163. my opinion and offer to the Company, to feed and defend the Colonies, pag. 150. my account to them here of my actions there, pag. 163. my seven answers to his Majesty's Commissioners: seven questions what hath hindered Virginia, and the remedy, pag. 165. How those noble Gentlemen spent near two years in perusing all letters came from thence; and the differences betwixt many factions, both here and there, with their complaints; especially about the Sallerie, which should have been a new office in London, for the well ordering the sale of Tobacco, that 2500. pounds should yearly have been raised out of it, to pay four or five hundred pounds yearly to the Governor of that Company; two or three hundred to his Deputy; the rest into stipends of thirty or fifty pounds yearly for their Clerks and under Officers which were never there, pag. 153. but not one hundred pounds for all them in Virginia, nor any thing for the most part of the Adventurers in England, except the undertakers for the Lotteries, Setters out of ships, Adventurers of commodities, also their Factors and many other Officers, there employed only by friendship to raise their fortunes out of the labours of the true industrious planters by the title of their office, who under the colour of sincerity, did pillage and deceive all the rest most cunningly: For more than 150000. pounds have been spent out of the common stock, besides many thousands have been there consumed, and near 7000. people that there died, only for want of good order and government, otherwise long ere this there would have been more than 20000. people, wh●re after twenty years spent only in compliment, and trying new conclusions, was remaining scarce 1500. with some few cattle. Then the Company dissolved, but no account of any thing; so that his Majesty appointed Commissioners to oversee, and give order for their proceedings. Being thus in a manner left to themselves, since then within these four years, you shall see how wonderfully they have increased beyond expectation; but so exactly as I desired, I cannot relate unto you: For although I have tired myself in seeking and discoursing with those returned thence, more than would a voyage to Virginia; few can tell me any thing, but of that place or places they have inhabited, and he is a great traveller that hath gone up & down the river of james Town, been at Pamaunke, Smith's Isles, or Accomack; wherein for the most part they keep one tune of their now particular abundance, and their former wants, having been there, some sixteen years, some twelve, some six, some near twenty, etc. But of their general estate, or any thing of worth, the most of them doth know very little to any purpose. Now the most I could understand in general, Their estate 1●27. was from the relation of Mr. Nathaniel Causeway, that lived there with me, and returned Anno Dom. 1627. and some others affirm; Sir George Yerley was Governor, Captain Francis West, Doctor john Poot, Captain Roger Smith, Captain Matthewes, Captain Tucker, Mr. Clabourne, and Mr. Farrer of the Council: their habitations many. The Governor, with two or three of the Council, are for most part at james Town, the rest repair thither as there is occasion; but every three months they have a general meeting, to consider of their public affairs. Their numbers then were about 1500. Their numbers. some say rather 2000 divided into seventeen or eighteen several Plantations; the greatest part thereof towards the falls, are so enclosed with Pallizadoes they regard not the Savages; and amongst those Plantations above james Town, they have now found means to take plenty of fish, as well with lines, as nets, and where the waters are the largest, having means, they need not want. Their condition with the Savages. Upon this River they seldom see any Savages, but in the woods, many times their fires: yet some few there are, that upon their opportunity have slain some few stragglers, which have been revenged with the death of so many of themselves; but no other attempt hath been made upon them this two or three years. Their Cattle, Their increase of Cattle and Poultry. namely Oxen, Kine, Bulls, they imagine to be about 2000 Goat's great store and great increase; the wild Hogs, which were infinite, are destroyed and eaten by the Savages: but no family is so poor, that hath not tame Swine sufficient; and for Poultry, he is a very bad husband breedeth not an hundred in a year, and the richer sort doth daily feed on them. For bread they have plenty, and so good, Plenty of Corne. that those that make it well, better cannot be: diverse have much English corn, especially Mr. Abraham Perce, which prepared this year to sow two hundred acres of English wheat, and as much with barley, feeding daily about the number of sixty persons at his own charges. For drink, some malt the Indian corn, others barley, Their drink. of which they make good Ale, both strong and small, and such plenty thereof, few of the upper Planters drink any water: but the better sort are well furnished with Sack, Aquavitae, and good English Beer. Their servants commonly feed upon Milk Homini, Their servant's diet. which is bruised Indian corn pounded, and boiled thick, and milk for the sauce; but boiled with milk, the best of all will oft feed on it, and leave their fl●sh; with milk, butter and cheese; with fish, Bulls flesh, for they seldom kill any other, etc. And every one is so applied to his labour about Tobacco and Corn, which doth yield them them such profit, they never regard any food from the Savages, nor have they any trade or conference with them, but upon mere accidents and defiances: and now the Merchants have left it, there have gone so many voluntary ships within this two years, as have furnished them with Apparel, Sack, Aquavitae, and all necessaries, much better than ever before. For Arms, there is scarce any man but he is furnished with a Piece, Their Arms and exercise. a jack, a Coat of Mail, a Sword, or Rapier; and every Holiday, every Plantation doth exercise their men in Arms, by which means, hunting and fowling, the most part of them are most excellent mark-men. For Discoveries they have made none, Their health and discoveries. nor any other commodity than Tobacco do they apply themselves unto, though never any was planted at first. And whereas the Country was heretofore held most intemperate and contagious by many, now they have houses, lodgings and victual, and the Sun hath power to exhale up the moist vapours of the earth, where they have cut down the wood, which before it could not, being covered with spreading tops of high trees; they find it much more healthful than before; nor for their numbers, few Countries are less troubled with death, sickness, or any other disease, nor where overgrown women become more fruitful. Since this, Sir George Yerley died 1628. Captain West succeeded him; The present estate of Virginia, 1629. but about a year after returned for England: Now Doctor Poot is Governor, and the rest of the Council as before: james Town is yet their chief seat, most of the wood destroyed, little corn there planted, but all converted into pasture and gardens, wherein doth grow all manner of herbs and roots we have in England in abundance, and as good grass as can be. Here most of their Cattle do feed, their Owners being most some one way, some another, about their plantations, and return again when they please, or any shipping comes in to trade. Here in winter they have hay for their cattle, but in other places they browse upon wood, and the great husks of their corn, with some corn in them, Mas●●r Hat●hins. doth keep them well Mr. Hutchins says, the● h●ve 2000 C●●●le, and about 5000. people; but Master Flond, john Davis, William Emerson, and diverse others, Five ●ho●s●nd p●●●le. say, about five thousand people, and five t●ousand kine, ●ive thou●●nd ca●e●●. calves, oxen, and bull●; for goa●s, hogs, a●d poultry; corn, fish, dear, and many sorts of other wild beast's; and fowl in their season, they have so much more than they spend, G●a●s, Ho●●and Poultry ●is●●ce. they are able to feed thr●e or four hundred men more than they have; and do oft much relieve many ships, both there, and for their return; and this last year was there at least two or th●ee and twenty sail. They have oft much salt fi●h from New England, but fresh fish enough, when they will take it; Peaches in abundance at Kecoughtan; Apples, Pears, Apricocks, Vines, figs, and other fruits some have planted, that prospered exceedingly, but their diligence about Tobacco, left them to be spoiled by the cattles, yet now they begin to revive; Mistress Pearce, an honest industrious woman, hath been there near twenty years, and now returned, sait●, she hath a Garden at james town, Good Hospitality. containing three ●r s●me a●●e●, where in one year she hath gathered near an hundred bushels of excellent figs; and that of her own provision she can keep a better house in Virginia, than here in London for 3. or 400. pounds a year, yet went thither with little or nothing. They have some tame geese, ducks, and turkeys. The masters now do so train up their servants and youth in shooting dear, and fowl, that the youths will kill them as well as their Mast●●s. They have two brew-houses, but they find the Indian corn so much better than ours, they begin to leave sowing it. Their Cities and Towns are only scattered houses, they call plantations, as are our Country Villages, but no Ordnance mounted. The Forts Captain Smith left a building, so ruined, there is scarce mention where they were; no discoveries of any thing more, than the curing of Tobacco, by which hitherto, being so present a commodity of gain, it hath brought them to this abundance; but that they are so disjointed, and every one commander of himself, to plant what he will: they are now so well provided, that they are able to subsist; and if they would join together, Commodity's worth making, Bla●ke Walnut Ash for P●●es, Oak for planks, knees for Ships, Cypress for Chests, etc. now to work upon Soap-ashes, Iron, R●pe-oile, Mader, Pitch and Tar, Flax and Hemp; as for their Tobacco, there comes from many places such abundance, and the charge so great, it is not worth the bringing home. There is gone, and now a going, diverse Ships, as Captain Perseus, Captain Prine, with Sir john Harvy to be their governor, with two or three hundred people; there is also some Bristol, and other parts of the West Country a preparing, which I heartily pray to God to bless, and send them a happy and prosperous, voyage. Nathaniel Causey, Master Hutchins, Master Flood, john Davis, William Emerson, Master William Barnet, Master Cooper, and others, CHAP. XXII. The proceedings and present estate of the Summer Iles, from An. Dom. 1624. to this present 1629. FRom the Summer Iles, Master Ireland, and diverse others report, their Forts, Ordnance, and proceedings, are much as they were in the year 1622. as you may read in the general History, page 199. Captain Woodhouse governor. There are few sorts of any fruits in the West Indies, but they grow there in abundance; yet the fertility of the soil in many places decayeth, being planted every year; for their Plantaines, which is a most delicate fruit, they have lately found a way, by pickling, or drying them, to bring them over into England, there beinq no such fruit in Europe, & wonderful for increase. For fish, flesh, figs, wine, and all sorts of most excellent herbs, fruits, and roots they have in abundance. In this Governors' time, a kind of Whale, or rather a jubarta, was driven on shore in Southampton tr●be from the west, over an infinite number of rocks, so bruised, that the water in the Bay where she lay; was all oily, and the rocks about it all bedashed with Parmacitty, congealed like ice, a good quantity we gathered, with which we commonly cured any boil, hurt, or bruise; some burned it in their lamps, which blowing out, the very snuff will burn, so long as there is any of the oil remaining, for two or three days together. The next Governor, was Captain Philip Bell, The present estate of the Summer Iler. 1629. whose time being expired, Captain Roger Wodd possessed his place, a worthy Gentleman of good desert, and hath lived a long time in the Country; their numbers are about two or three thousand, men, women, and children, who increase there exceedingly; their greatest complaint, is want of apparel, and too much custom, and too many officers; the pity is, there, are more men than women, yet no great mischief, because there is so much less pride: the cattle they have increase exceedingly; their forts are well maintained by the Merchants here, and Planters there; to be brief, this I'll is an excellent bit, to rule great horse. All the Cohow birds and Egbirds are gone; seldom any wild cats seen; no Rats to speak of; but the worms are yet very troublesome; the people very healthful; and the Ravens gone; fish enough, but not so near, the shore as it used, by the much beating it; it is an I'll that hath such a rampire and a ditch, and for the quantity so manned, victualled, and fortified, as few in the world do exceed it, or is like it. The 22. of March, two ships came from thence; An evil mischance. the Peter-Bonaventure, near two hundred tons, and sixteen pieces of Ordnance; the Captain, Thomas Sherwin; The Master, Master Edward Some, like him in condition, a goodly, lusty, proper valiant man: the Lydia, wherein was Master Anthony thorn, a smaller ship; were chased by eleven ships of Dunkirk; being thus overmatched, Captain Sherwin was taken by them in Turbay, only his valiant Master was slain; the ship with about seventy English men, they carried betwixt Dover and Calais, to Dunk●rk; but the Lydia safely recovered Dartmouth. These noble adventurers for all those losses, patiently do bear them; but they hope the King and state will understand it is worth keeping, though it afford nothing but Tobacco, and that now worth little or nothing, custom and fraught paid, yet it is worth keeping, and not supplanting; though great men feel not those losses, yet gardiner's, Carpenters, and Smiths do pay for it. From the relation of Robert Chesteven, and others. Chap. XXIII. The proceedings and present estate of New England, Since 1614 to this present 1629. WHen I went first to the North part of Virginia, where the Westerly Colony had been planted, it had dissolved itself within a year, and there was not one Christian in all the land. I was set forth at the sole charge of four Merchants of London; the Country being then reputed by your westerlings, a most rocky, barren, desolate desert; but the good return I brought from thence, Considerations ●bout the loss of ●ime. with the maps and relations I made of the Country, which I made so manifest, some of them did believe me, and they were well embraced, both by the Londoners, and Westerlings, for whom I had promised to undertake it, thinking to have joined them all together, but that might well have become a work for Hercules. Betwixt them long there was much contention; the Londoners indeed went bravely forward; but in three or four years, I and my friends consumed many hundred pounds amongst the Plimothians, who only said me but with delays, promises, and excuses, but no performance of any thing to any purpose. In the interim, many particular ships went thither, and finding my relations true, and that I had not taken that I brought home from the French men, as had been reported; yet further for my pains to discredit me, and my calling it New England, they obscured it, and shadowed it, with the title of Cannada, till at my humble suit, it pleased our most Royal King Charles, whom God long keep, bless, and preserve, than Prince of Wales, to confirm it with my map and book, by the the title of New England; the gain thence returning did make the same thereof so increase, that thirty, forty, or fifty sail, went yearly only to trade and fish; but nothing would be done for a plantation, till about some hundred, of your Brownists of England, Amsterdam, and Leyden, went to New Plymouth, whose humorous ignorances, caused them for more than a year, to endure a wonderful deal of misery, The effect of niggardliness. with an infinite patience; saying my books and maps were much better cheap to teach them, than myself; many other have used the like good husbandry, that have paid sound in trying their selfewilled conclusions; but those in time doing well, divers others have in small handfuls undertaken to go there, to be several Lords and Kings of themselves, but most vanished to nothing; notwithstanding the fishing ships, made such good returns, at last it was engrossed by twenty Pattenties, that divided my map into twenty parts, and cast lots for their shares; but money not coming in as they expected, procured a Proclamation, none should go thither without their licences to fish; but for every thirty tons of shipping, to pay them five pounds; beside, upon great penalties, neither to trade with the natives, cut down wood for their stages, without giving satisfaction, though all the Country is nothing but wood, and none to make use of it, with many such other pretences, for to make this Country plant itself, by its own wealth: hereupon most men grew so discontented, that few or none would go; so that the Pattenties, who never one of them had been there, seeing those projects would not prevail, have since not hindered any to go that would, that within these few last years, more have gone thither than ever. Now this year 1629. a great company of people of good rank, A new plantation 1629 zeal, means, and quality, have made a great stock, and with six good ships in the months of April and May, they set sail from Thames, for the Bay of the Massachuselts, otherwise called Charles River; viz. the George Bonaventure, of twenty pieces of Ordnance, the Talbot nineteen, the Lions-whelpe eight, the May-flower fourteen, the Four Sisters, fourteen, the Pilgrim four, with three hundred and fifty men, women, and children; also an hundred and fifteen head of cattle, as horse, mares, and neat beast; one and forty goats, some Coneys, with all provision for household, and apparel; six pieces of great Ordnance for a Fort, with Muskets, Pikes, Corselets, Drums, Colours, with all provisions necessary for a plantation, for the good of man; other particulars I understand of no more, than is writ in the general history of those Countries. But you are to understand that the noble Lord chief justice Popham, judge Doderege; the Right Honourable Earls of Pembroke, Southampton, Salesbury, and the rest, as I take it, they did all think, as I and them went with me, did; That had those two Countries been planted, as it was intended, that no other nation should come plant betwixt us. If ever the King of Spain and we should fall foul, those Countries being so capable of all materials for shipping, by this might have been owners of a good Fleet of ships, and to have relieved a whole Navy from England upon occasion; yea, and to have furnished England with the most Easterly commodities; and now since, seeing how conveniently the Summer Iles fell to our shares, so near the West Indies, we might with much more facility than the Dutchmen hav● invaded the West Indies, that doth now put in practice, what so long hath been advised on, by many an honest English Statesman. Notes of inconvenience. Those Country's Ca●taine Smith oft times used to call his children that never had mother; & well he might, for few fathers ever paid dearer for so little consent; and for those that would truly understand, how many strange accidents hath befallen them and him; how oft up, how oft down, sometimes near desperate, and ere long flourishing, cannot but conceive Gods infinite mercies and favours towards them. Had his designs been to have persuaded men to a mine of gold, though few doth conceive either the charge or pains in refining it, nor the power nor care to defend it; or some new Invention to pass to the South Sea; or some strange plot to invade some strange Monastery: or some portable Country; or some chargeable Fleet to take some rich Carocks in the East Indies; or Letters of Mart to rob some poor Merchants; what multitudes of both people and money, would contend to be first employed: but in those noble endeavours (now) how few of quality, unless it be to beg some Monopoly; and those seldom seek the common good, but the commons goods; as you may read at large in his general history, page 217, 218, 219. his general observations and reasons for this plantation; for yet those Countries are not so forward but they may become as miserable as ever, if better courses be not taken than is; as this Smith will plainly demonstrate to his Majesty; or any other noble person of ability, liable generously to undertake it; how within a short time to make Virginia able to resist any enemy, that as yet lieth open to all; and yield the King more custom within these few years, in certain staple commodities, than ever it did in Tobacco; which now not being worth bringing home, the custom will be as uncertain to the King, as dangerous to the plantations. CHAP. XXIIII. A brief discourse of diverse voyages made unto the goodly Country of Guiana, and the great River of the Amazons; relating also the present Plantation there. IT is not unknowen how that most industrious & honourable Knight Sir Walter Rauleigh, in the year of our Lord 1595. taking the I'll of Trinidado, fell with the Coast of Guiana Northward of the Line ten degrees, and coasted the Coast; and searched up the River Oranoca: where understanding that twenty several voyages had been made by the Spaniards, in discovering this Coast and River; to find a passage to the great City of Mano, called by them the Eldorado, or the Golden City: he did his utmost to have found some better satisfaction than relations: But means failing him, Sparrow left to seek the great City of Mano. he left his trusty servant Francis Sparrow to seek it, who wand'ring up and down those Countries, some fourteen or fifteen years, unexpectedly returned: I have heard him say, he was led blinded into this City by Indians; but little, discourse of any purpose touching the largeness of the report of it; his body seeming as a man of an uncurable consumption, short●● died here after in England. There are above thirty fair rivers that fall into the Sea, between the River of Amazons and Oranoca, which are some nine degrees asunder. In the year 1605. Captain Ley, brother to that noble Knight S●r Oliver Ley, Capucine 〈◊〉 L●y. with diverse others, planted himself in the River Weapoco, wherein I should have been a party; but he died, and there lies ●urie●, and the supply miscarrying, the rest escaped as they could. S●r Thomas Roe, well k●ow●n to be a most noble Gentleman, Sir Th●m●● R●e before he went Lord Ambassador to the Great Mogoll, or the Great Turk. spent a year or two upon this Coast, and about the River of the Amazons, wherein he most employed Captain Matthew Morton, Captain M●●●●● an expert Seaman in the discovery of this famous River, a Gentleman that was the first shot and mortally supposed wounded to death, with me in Virginia, yet si●ce h●th been twice with command in the East Indies; Also Captain William White, Capta●ne Wh●●e. and diverse others worthy and industrious Gentlemen, both before and since, hath spent much time and charge to discover it more perfectly, but nothing more effected for a Plantation, t●●●ic was undertaken by Captain Robert Harcote, 1609. This worthy Gentleman, Captain H●ne●. after he had by Commission made a discovery to his mind, left his brother Michael Harcote, with some fifty or sixty m●n in the River Weapoco, and so presently returned to England, where he obtained by the favour of Prince Henry, a large Patent for all that Coast called Guiana, together with the famous River of Amazons, to him and his heirs: but so many troubles here surprised him, though he did his best to supply them, he was not able, only some few he sent over as passengers with certain Dutchmen, but to small purpose. Thus this business lay dead for diverse years, till Sir Walter Rauleigh, accompanied with many valiant Soldiers and brave Gentlemen, went his last voyage to Guiana, amongst the which was Captain Roger North, brother to the Right Honourable the Lord Dudley North, who upon this voyage having stayed and seen diverse Rivers upon this Coast, took such a liking to those Countries, having had before this voyage more perfect and particular information of the excellency of the great River of the Amazons, above any of the rest, by certain Englishmen returned so rich from thence in good commodities, they would not go with Sir Walter Rauleigh in search of gold; that after his return for England, he endeavoured by his best abilities to interest his Country and st●te in those f●re Regions, which by the way of Letter's Patents unto diverse Noblemen and Gentlemen of quality, erected into a company and perpetuity for trade and plantation, not knowing of the Interest of Captain Harcote. Where upon accompanied with 120. Gentlemen and others, with a ship, Captain Roger North. a pinnace and two sh●llops, to remain in the Country, he set sail from Plymouth the last of April 1620, and within seven weeks after he arrived well in the Amazons, only with the loss of one old man: some hundred leagues they ran up the River to settle his men, where the sight of the Country and people so contented them, that never men thought themselves, more happy: Some English and Irish that had lived there some eight years, on●y supplied by the Dutch, he reduced to his company and to leave the Dutch: having made a good voyage, to the value of more than the charge, he returned to Englangd with diverse good commodities besides Tobacco: So that it may well be conceived, that if this action had not been thus crossed, the Generality of England had by this time been won and encouraged therein. But the time was not yet come, that God would have this great business effected, by reason of the great power the Lord Gundamore, Ambassador for the King of Spain, had in England, to cross and ruin those proceedings, and so unfortunate Captain North was in this business, he was twice committed prisoner to the Tower, and the goods detained, till they were spoiled, who beyond all others was by much the greatest Adventurer and Loser. Nota ben●. Notwithstanding all this, those that he had left in the Amazons would not abandon the Country. Captain Thomas Painton, a worthy Gentleman, his Lieutenant dead. Captain Charles Parker, brother to the Right Honourable the Lord Morley, lived there six years after; Mr. john Christmas, five years, so well, they would not return, although they might, with diverse either Gentlemen of quality and others: all thus destitute of any supplies from England. But all authority being dissolved, want of government did more wrong their proceedings, than all other crosses whatsoever. Some relief they had sometime from the Dutch, who knowing their estates, gave what they pleased and took what they list. Two brothers Gentlemen, Thomas and William Hixon, who stayed three years there, are now gone to stay in the Amazons, in the ships lately sent thither. The business thus remaining in this sort, three private men left of that Company, named Mr Thomas Warriner, john Rhodes, and Robert Bims, having lived there about two years, came for England, and to be free from the disorders that did grow in the Amazons for want of Government amongst their Countrymen, and to be quiet amongst themselves, made means to set themselves out for St. Christopher's; their whole number being but fifteen persons, that paid for their passage in a ship going for Virginia, where they remained a year before they were supplied, and then that was but four or five men. Thus this I'll, by this small beginning, having no interruption by their own Country, hath now got the start of the Continent and main Land of Guiana, which hath been laid apart and let alone until that Captain North, ever watching his best opportunity and advantage of time in the state, hath now again pursued and set on foot his former design. Captain Harco●e being now willing to surrender his grant, and to join with Captain North, in passing a new Patent, and to erect a company for trade and plantation in the Amazons, and all the Coast and Country of Guiana for ever. Whereupon, they have sent this present year in januarie, and since 1628. four ships with near two hundred persons; the first ship with 112. men, not one miscarried; that rest went since, not yet heard of, and are preparing another with their best expedition: and since januarie is gone from Holland, 100 English and Irish, conducted by the old Planters. This great River lieth under the Line, the two chief head lands North and South, are about three degrees asunder, the mouth of it is so full of many great and small Isles, it is an easy matter for an unexperienced Pilot to lose his way. It is held one of the greatest rivers in America, and as most men think, in the world: and cometh down with such a fresh, it maketh the Sea fresh more than thirty miles from the shore. Captain North having seated his men about an hundred leagues in the Main, sent Captain William White, with th●rtie Gentlemen and others, in a pinuace of thirty tun, to discover further, which they did some two hundred leagues, where they found the River to divide itself in two parts, till then all full of Lands, and a Country most healthful, pleasant and fruitful; for they found food enough, and all returned safe & in good health: In this discovery they saw many Towns well inhabited, some with three hundred people, some with five, six, or seven hundred; and of some they understood to be of so many thousands, most differing very much, especially in their languages: whereof they suppose by those Indians, they understand are many hundreds more, unfrequented till then by any Christian, most of them stark naked, both men, women and children, but they saw not any such giantlike women as the River's name importeth. But for those where Captain North hath feated his company, it is not known where Indians were ever so kind to any Nation, not sparing any pains, danger or labour, to feed and maintain them. The English following their buildings, fortifications and sugar-workes; for which they have sent most expert men, and with them all things necessary for that purpose; to effect which, they want not the help of those kind Indians to produce; and many other good commodities, which (God willing) will ere long make plain and apparent to this Kingdom, and all the Adventurers and Well-willers to this Plantation, to be well worthy the cherishing and following with all alacrity. CHAP. XXV. The beginning and proceedings of the new plantation of St. Christopher by Captain Warner. MAster Ralph Merifield and others, 1623. having furnished this worhty industrious Gentleman, he arrived at St. Christopher's, as is said, with fifteen men, the 28. of januarie, 1623. viz. William Tested, john Rhodes, Robert Bims, Mr. Benifield, Sergeant jones, Mr. Ware, William roil, Rowland Grascocke, Mr. Bond, Mr. Langley, Mr. Weaver, Edward Warner their Captain's son, and now Deputy-Governour till his father's return, Sergeant Aplon, one Sailor and a Cook: At their arrival they found three Frenchmen, who sought to oppose Captain Warner, and to set the Indians upon us; but at last we all became friends, and lived with the Indians a month, than we built a Fort, and a house, and planting fruits, by September we made a crop of Tobacco; but upon the nineteenth of September came a Hurricane and blew it away, A Hurricane all this while we lived upon Cassada bread, Potatoes, Plantines, Pines, Turtles, Guanes, and fish plenty; for drink we h●d Nicnobbie. ●●24. The 18. of March 1624. arrived Captain jefferson with three men passengers in the Hope-well of London, with some trade for the Indians, and then we had another crop of Tobacco, in the mean time the French had planted themselves in the other end of the I'll; with this crop Captain Warner returned for England in September, 1625. ●●●5. In his absence came in a French pinnace, under the command of Monsieur de Nombe, that told us, the Indians had slain some Frenchmen in other of the Charybes Isles, and that there were six Peryagoes, which are huge great trees form as your Canowes', but so laid out on the sides with boards, 〈◊〉 ●●●●●h ●●e 〈◊〉 Ind●●●●. they will seem like a little Galley: six of those, with about sour or five hundred strange Indians came unto us, we bade them be gone, but they would not; whereupon we and the French joined together, and upon the fifth of November set upon them, and put them to flight: upon New-year's Even they came again, found three English going about the I'll, whom they slew. 1625 Until the fourth of August, we stood upon our guard, living upon the spoil and did nothing. But now Captain Warner arriving again with near an hundred people, than we fell to work and planting as before; 〈◊〉 but upon the fourth of September, came such a Hurricane, as blew down all our houses, Tobacco, and two Drums into the air we know not whither, drove two ships on shore that were both split; all our provision thus lost, we were very miserable, living only on what we could get in the wild woods, 〈◊〉 ●●en●h ●●●●ne. we made a small party of French and English to go aboard for provision, but in their returning home, eight French men were slain in the harbour. 162● Thus we continued till near june that the Tortels came in, 1627. but the French being like to starve, sought to surprise us, and all the Cassado, Potatoes, and Tobacco we had planted, but we did prevent them. The 26. of October, came in Captain William Smith, in the Hope-well, with some Ordnance, shot and powder, from the Earl of Carlisle; with Captain Pelham and thirty men, about that time also came the Blow; also a small ship of Bristol, with Captain Warners wife, and six or seven women more. T●●ce 〈…〉 Upon the 25. of November, the Indians set upon the French, for some injury about their women, and slew six and twenty French men, five English, and three Indians. Their weapons are bows and arrows; their bows are never bend, but the string lies flat to the bow; their arrows a small reed, four or five foot long, headed some with the poisoned sting of the tail of a Stingray, some with iron, some with wood, but all so poisoned, The arrival of many English ●●●p●. that if they draw but blood, the hurt is incurable. The next day came in Captain Charles Saltonstall, a young Gentleman, son of Sir Samuel Saltonstall, who brought with him good store of all commodities to relieve the plantation; but by reason some Hollanders, and others, had been there lately before him, who carried away with them all the Tobacco, he was forced to put away all his commodities upon trust till the next crop; in the mean time he resolved there to stay, and employ himself & his company in planting Tobacco, hoping thereby to make a voyage, but before he cou●d be ready to return for England, a Hurricane h●pu●●g, his ship was split, to his great loss, being sol● Merchant and owner himself, notwithstanding forced to pay to the Governor, the filled part of his Tobacco, and for fraught to England, three pence a pound, and nine pence a pound custom, wh●ch amounts together to more than thre●score pound in the hundred pound, to the great discouragement of him and many others, that intended well to those plantations. Nevertheless he is gone again this present year 1629. with a ship of about three hundred tons, and very near two hundred people, with Sir William Tuffton Govenour for the Barbados, and diverse gentlemen, and all manner of commodities fit for a plantation. Captain Prinne, Captain Stone, and divers others, came in about Christmas; so that this last year there hath been about thirty sail of English, French, and Dutch ships, and all the Indians forced out of the I'll, for they had done much mischief amongst the French, in cutting their throats, burning their houses, and spoiling their Tobacco; amongst: the rest Tegramund, a little child the King's son, his parents being slain, or fled, was by great chance saved, and carefully brought to England by Master Merifield, who brought him from thence and bringeth him up as his own children. It lieth seventeen degrees Northward of the line, The description of the lie. about an hundred and twenty leagues from the Cape de tres Puntas, the nearest main land in America, it is about eight leagues in length, and four in breadth; an Island amongst 100 Isles in the West Indies, called the Caribes, where ordinarily all them that frequent the West Indies, refresh themselves; those most of them are rocky, little, and mountainous, yet frequented with the Cannibals; many of them inhabited, as Saint Domingo, Saint Mattalin, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent, Granada, and Margarita, to the Southward; Northward, none but Saint Christopher's, and it but lat●ly, yet they will be ranging Marigalanta, Guardalupo, Deceado, Monserat, Antigua, Mevis, Bernardo, Saint Martin, and Saint Bartholomew, but the worst of the four Isles possessed by the Spaniard, as Portorico or jamica, is better than them all; as for Hispaniola, and Cuba, they are worthy the title of two rich Kingdoms, the rest not respected by the Spaniards, for want of harbours, and their better choice of good land, and profit in the main. But Captain Warner, having been very familiar with Captain Painton, in the Amazon, hearing his information of this St. Christopher's; and having made a years trial, as it is said, returned for England, joining with Master Merifield, and his friends, got Letters Patents, from King james, to plant and possess it. Since then, the Right Honourable the Earl of Carlisle, hath got Letters Patents also, not only of that, but all the Caribes Isles about it, who is now chief Lord of them, and the English his tenants, that do possess them; over whom he appointeth such Governors and Officers, as their affairs require; and although there be a great custom imposed upon them, considering their other charges, both to feed and maintain themselves; yet there is there, and now a going, near upon the number of three thousand people; where by reason of the rockiness and thickness of the woods in the I'll, it is difficult to pass, and such a snuff of the Sea goeth on the shore, ten m●y better defend, The springs, temper, and seasons. than fifty assault. In this I'll are many springs, but yet water is scarce again in many places; the valleys and sides of the hills very fertile, but the mountains harsh, and of a sulphurous composition; all overgrown with Palmetas, Cotten trees, Lignum vitae, and diverse other sorts, but none like any in Christendom, except those carried thither; the air very pleasant and healthful, but exceeding ●ot, yet so tempered with cool breaths, it seems very temperate to them, that are a little used to it; the trees being always green, the days and nights always very near equal in length, always Summer; only they have in their seasons great gusts and reins, and sometimes a Hurricane, which is an overgrown, and a most violent storm. A strange hat●hung of eg●es ●or b●●sts. In some of those Isles, are cattle, goats, and hogs, but here none but what they must carry; Gwanes they have, which is a little harmless beast, like a Crokadell, or Aligator, very fat and good meat, she lays eggs in the sand, as doth the land Crabs, which live here in abundance, like Coneys in Boroughs, unless about May, when they come down to the Sea side, to lay in the sand, as the other; and all their eggs are hatched by the heat of the Sun. fish. From May to September they have good store of Tortasses, that come out of the Sea to lay their eggs in the sand, and are hatched as the other; they will lay half a peck at a time, and near a bushel ere they have done; and are round like Tenisballs: this fish is like veal in taste, the fat of a brownish colour, very good and wholesome. We seek them in the nights, where we find them on shore, we turn them upon their backs, till the next day we fetch them home, for they can never return themselves, being so hard a cart may go over them; and so big, one will suffice forty or fifty men to dinner. Divers sorts of other fish they have in abundance, and Prawns most great and excellent, but none will keep sweet scarce twelve hours. ●●●ds. The best and greatest is a Passer Flaminga, which walking at her length is as tall as a man; Pigeons, and Turtle Doves in abundance; some Parrots, wild Hawks, but diverse other sorts of good Sea fowl, whose names we know not. Roots. Cassado is a root planted in the ground, of a wonderful increase, and will make very good white bread, but the juice rank poison, yet boiled, better than wine; Potatoes, Cabbages and Radish plenty. Fruits May's, like the Virginia wheat; we have Pineapples, near so big as an Hartichocke, but the most daintiest taste of any fruit; Plantnais, an excellent, and a most increasing fruit; Apples, Prickell Pears, and Pease, but differing all from ours. There is Pepper that groweth in a little red husk, as big as a Walnut, about four inches in length, but the long cod are small, and much stronger, and better for use, than that from the East Indies. There is two sorts of Cotten, the silk Cotten as in the East Indies, groweth upon a small stalk, as good for beds as down; the other upon a shrub, and beareth a cod bigger than a Walnut, full of Cotten wool: Anotto also groweth upon a shrub, with a cod like the other, and nine or ten on a bunch, full of Anotto, very good for Dyers, though wild; Sugar Canes, not tame, 4. or 5. foot high; also Mastic, and Locus trees; great and hard timber, Gourds, Musk Melons, Water Melons, Lettuce, P●rsly; all places naturally bear purslane of itself; Sope-berries like a Musket bullet, that washeth as white as Soap; in the middle of the root is a thing like a sedge, a very good f●uit, we call Pengromes; a Pappaw is as great as an apple, coloured like an Orange, and good to eat; a small hard nut, like a hazel nut, grows close to the ground, and like this grows on the Palmetas, which we call a Mucca nut; Mustardseed will grow to a great tree, but bears no seed, yet the leaves will make good mustard; the Mancinell three the fruit is poison; good figs in abundance; but the Palmeta serveth to build Forts and houses, the leaves to cover them, and many other uses; the juice we draw from them, till we suck them to death, (is held restorative) and the top for meat doth serve us as Cabbage; but oft we want powdered Beef, and Bacon, and many other needful necessaries. by Thomas Simons, Rowland Grascocke, Nicholas Burgh, and others. CHAP. XXVI. The first planting of the Barbados. THe Barbados lies South-west and by South, an hundred leagues from Saint Christopher's, threescore leagues West and South from Trinidado, and some fourscore leagues from Cape de Salinos, the next part of the main. The first planters brought thither by Captain Henry Powel, were forty English, with seven or eight Negroes; then he went to Disacuba in the main, where he got thirty Indians, men, women, and children, of the Arawacoes, enemies both to the Caribes, A ●eseripu●n●● the l●●. and the Spaniards. The I'll is most like a triangle, each side forty or fifty miles square, some exceeding great rocks, but the most part exceeding good ground; abounding with an infinite number of Swine, some Turtles, and many sorts of excellent fish; many great ponds wherein is Duck and Mallard; excellent clay for pots, wood and stone for building, and a spring near the midst of the I'll of Bitume, which is a liquid mixture like Tar, that by the great reins falls from the tops of the mountains, it floats upon the water in such abundance, that drying up, it remains like great rocks of pitch, and as good as pitch for any use. The Mancinell apple, is of a most pleasant sweet smell, Fruits and tree. of the bigness of a Crab, but rank poison, yet the Swine and Birds have wit to shun it; great store of exceeding great Locus trees, two or three fathom about, of a great height, that beareth a cod full of meal, will m●ke bread in time of necessity. A tree like a Pine, beareth a fruit so great as a Musk Melon, which hath always ripe fruit, flowers, or green fruit, which will refresh two or three men, and very comfortable; Plumb trees many, the fruit great and yellow, which but strained into water in four and twenty hours will be very good drink; wild fig trees there are many; all those fruits do fat the hogs, yet at some times of the year they are so lean, as carrion; Gwane trees bear a fruit so big as a Pear, good and wholesome; Palmetaes' of three several f●rrs; Papawes, Prickle Pears good to eat or make drink; Cedar trees very tall and great; Fusticke trees are very great and the wood yellow, good for dying; soap berries, the kernel so big as a slow, and good to eat; Pumpeons in abundance; Goads so great as will make good great bottles, and cut in two pieces good dishes and platters; many small brooks of very good water; Ginni wheat, Cassado, Pines and Plantaines; all things we there plant do grow exceedingly, so well as Tobacco; the corn, pease, and beans, cut but away the stalk, young sprigs will grow, and so bear fruit for many years together, without any more planting; the I'll is overgrown with wood or great reeds, those woods w●ich are soft are exceeding light and full of pitch, and those that are hard, are so hard and great, they are as hard to cut as stone. Their numbers. Master john powel came thither the fourth of August 1627. with forty five men, where we stayed three weeks, and then returning, left behind us about an hundred people, and his son john powel for his Deputy, as Governor; but there have been so many factions amongst them, I cannot from so many variable relations give you any certainty for their orderly Government: for all those plenties, much misery they have endured, in regard of their weakness at their landing, and long st●y without supplies; therefore those that go thither, it were good they carry good provision with them; but the I'll is most healthful, and all things planted do increase abundantly: and by this time there is, and now a going, about the number of fifteen or sixteen hundred people. Sir William Curtain, and Captain john powel, were the first and chief adventurers to the planting this fortunate I'll; which had been oft frequented by men of War to refresh themselves, and set up their shallops; being so far remote from the rest of the Isles, they never were troubled with any of the Indies. Harbours they have none, but exceeding good Rhodes, which with a small charge might be very well fortified; it doth ebb and flow four or five foot, and they cannot perceive there hath ever been any Hurricane in that I'll. From the relations of Captain john White, and Captain Wolverstone. CHAP. XXVII. The first plantation of the I'll of Mevis. BEcause I have ranged and lived amongst those Lands, what my authors cannot tell me, The description of the I'll. I think it no great error in helping them to tell it myself. In this little I'll of Mevis, more than twenty years ago, I have remained a good time together, to would, and water and refresh my men; it is all woddy, but by the Sea side Southward there are sands like downs, where a thousand men may quarter themselves conveniently; but in most places the wood groweth close to the water side, at a high water mark, and in some places so thick of a soft spongy wood like a wild fig tree, you cannot get through it, but by m●king your w●y with hatchets, or falchions: whether it was the dew of those trees, or of some others, I am not certain, but many of our men became so tormented with a burning sw●lling all over their bodies, they seemed like se●ld●d men, and near mad with pain; here we found a great Pool, T●e Ma●. wherein bathing themselves, they found much ease; and finding it fed with a pleasant small stream that came out of the woods, we found the head half a m●le within the land, distilling from a many of rocks, by which they were well cured in two or three days. Such factions here we had, as commonly attend such voyages, that a pair of gallows was m●de, but Captain Smith, for whom they were intended, could not be persuaded to use them; but not any one of the inventors, but their lives by justice fell into his power, to determine of at his pleasure, whom with much mercy he favoured, that most basely and unjustly would have betrayed him. The last year, 1628. Master Littleton, A gr●●t mispr●●●●● with some others got a Patent of the Earl of Carlisle, to plant the I'll called the Barbados, thirty leagues Northward of Saint Christopher's; which by report of their informers, and undertakers, for the excellency and pleasantness thereof, they called Dulcina, but when they came there, they found it such a barren rock, they left it; although they were told as much before, they would not believe it, persuading themselves, those contradicters would get it for themselves, was thus by their cunning opinion, the deceiver of themselves; for seeing it lie conveniently for their purpose in a map, they had not patience to know the goodness or badness, the inconvenience nor probabilities of the quality, nor quantity; which error doth predominate in most of our homebred adventurers, that will have all things as they conceit and would have it; and the more they are contradicted, the more hot they are; but you may see by many examples in the general history, how difficult a matter it is, to gather the truth from amongst so many foreign and several relations, except you have exceeding good experience both of the Countries, people, and their conditions; and those ignorant undertake, have been the greatest hindrance of all those plantations. Their numbers. At last because they would be absolute, they came to Mevis, a little I'll by Saint Christopher's; where they seated themselv●s, well furnished with all necessaries, being about the number of an hundred, and since increased to an hundred and fifty persons, whereof many were old planters of Saint Christopher's, especially Master Anthony Hinton, and Master Edward Tompson. But because all those Isles for most part are so capable to produce, and in nature like each other, let this discourse serve for the description of them all. Thus much concerning those plantations, which now after all this time, loss, and charge, should they be abandoned, suppressed, and dissolved, were most lamentable; and surely seeing they all strive so much about this Tobacco, and that the fraught thereof, and other charges are so great, and so open to any enemy, by that commodity they cannot long subsist. And it is a wonder to me to see such miracles of mischiefs in men; how greedily they pursue to dispossess the planters of the Name of Christ jesus, yet say they are Christians, when so much of the world is unpossessed; yea, and better land than they so much strive for, murdering so many Christians, burning and spoiling so many cities, villages, and Countries, and subverting so many kingdoms, when so much lieth vast, or only possessed by a few poor Savages, that more serve the Devil for fear, than God for love; whose ignorance we pretend to reform, but covetousness, humours, ambition, faction, and pride, hath so many instruments, we perform very little to any purpose; nor is there either honour or profit to be got by any that are so vile, to undertake the subversion, or hindrance of any honest intended christian plantation. Now to conclude the travels and adventures of Captain Smith; 〈…〉. how first he planted Virginia, and was set ashore with about an hundred men in the wild woods; how he was taken prisoner by the Savages, by the King of Pamaunke tied to a tree to be shot to death, led up and down their Country to be showed for a wonder; fatted as he thought, for a sacrifice for their Idol, before whom they conjured him three days, with strange dances and invocations than brought him before their Emperor Powhatan, that commanded him to be slain; how his daughter Pocahontas saved his life, returned him to james town, relieved him and his famished company, which was but eight and thirty to possess those large dominions; how he discovered all the several nations, upon the rivers falling into the Bay of Chisapeacke; stung near to death with a most poisoned tail of a fish called Stingray: how Powhatan out of his Country took the kings of Pamaunke and Paspahegh prisoners, forced thirty nine of those kings to pay him contribution, subjected all the Savages: how Smith was blown up with gunpowder, and returned for England to be cured. Also how he brought our new England to the subjection of the kingdom of great Britain; his fights with the Pirates, left alone amongst a many French men of War, and his ship ran from him; his Sea-fights for the French against the Spaniards; their bad usage of him; how in France in a little boat he escaped them; was adrift all such a stormy night at Sea by himself, when thirteen French Ships were split, or driven on shore by the I'll of Ree, the general and most of his men drowned, when God to whom be all honour and praise, brought him safe on shore to all their admirations that escaped; you may read at large in his general history of Virginia, the Summer Iles, and New England. CHAP. XXVIII. The bad life, qualities and conditions of Pirates; and how they taught the Turks and Moors to become men of war. AS in all lands where there are many people, there are some thiefs, so in all Seas much frequented, there are some pirates; the most ancient within the memory of threescore years was one Calais, who most refreshed himself upon the Coast of Wales; Clinton and Pursser his companions, who grew famous, till Queen Elizabeth of blessed memory, hanged them at Wapping; Fleming was as expert and as much sought for as they, yet such a friend to his Country, that discovering the Spanish Armado, he voluntarily came to Plymouth, yielded himself freely to my Lord Admiral, and gave him notice of the Spaniards coming; which good warning came so happily and unexpectedly, that he had his pardon, & a good reward; some few Pirates there then remained; notwithstanding it is incredible how many great and rich prizes the little barks of the West Country daily brought home, in regard of their small charge; The d●s●cul●es of a great Navy. for there are so many difficulties in a great N●vy, by wind and weather, victual, sickness, losing and finding one another, they seldom defray half the charge: but for the grace, state, and defence of the Coast and narrow Seas, a great Navy is most necessary, but not to attempt any far voyage, except there be such a competent stock, they want not wherewith to furnish and supply all things with expedition; but to the purpose. After the death of our most gracious Queen Elizabeth, What ocasioneth Pirates. of blessed memory, our Royal King james, who from his infancy had reigned in peace with all Nations; had no employment for those men of war, so that those that were rich rested with that they had; those that were poor and had nothing but from hand to mouth, turned Pirates; some, because they became slighted of those for whom they had got much wealth; some, for that they could nor get their due; some, that had lived bravely, would not abase themselves to poverty; some vainly, only to get a name; others for revenge, covetousness, or as ill; and as they found themselves more and more oppressed, their passions increasing with discontent, made them turn Pirates. Now because they grew hateful to all Christian Princes, Their chief rendezvous. they retired to Barbary, where although there be not many good Harbours, but Tunis, Argier, Sally, Mamora, and Tituane, there are many convenient Rhodes, or the open Sea, which is their chief Lordship: For their best harbours Massalqueber, the towns of Oran, Mellila, Tanger, and Cuta, within the straits, are possessed by the Spaniards; without the straits they have also Arzella, and Mazagan; Mamora likewise they have lately taken, and fortified. Ward a poor English sailer, and Dansker a Dutchman, made first here their Marts, when the Moors knew scarce how to sail a ship; Bishop was Ancient, and did little hurt; but Easton got so much, as made himself a marquis in Savoy; and Ward lived like a Bashaw in Barbary; those were the first that taught the Moors to be men of war. genning's, Harris, Tompson, and diverse others, were taken in Ireland, a Coast they much frequented, and died at Wapping. Hewes, Bough, Smith, Walsingam, Ellis, Collins, Sawkwell, Wollistone, Barrow, Wilson, Sayres, and diverse others, all these were Captains amongst the Pirates, whom King james mercifully pardoned; and was it not strange, a few of these should command the Seas. Notwithstanding the Maltese, the Pope, Florentines, Genoeses, French, Dutch, and English, Galleys, and Men of War, they would rob before their faces, and even at their own Ports, yet seldom more than three, four, five or six in a Fleet: many times they had very good ships, and well manned, Their conditions. but commonly in such factions amongst themselves, and so riotous, quarrelous, treacherous, blasphemous, and villainous, it is more than a wonder they could so long continue, to do so much mischief; and all they got, they basely consumed it amongst jews, Turks, Moors, and whores. The best was, they would seldom go to Sea, so long as they could possibly live on shore, being compiled of English, French, Dutch, and Moors, (but very few Spaniards, or Italians) commonly running one from another, till they became so disjointed, disordered, debawched, and miserable, that the Turks and Moors began to command them as slaves, and force them to instruct them in their best skill, which many an accursed runnagado, or Christian turned Turk did, till they have made those Sally men, or Moors of Barbary so powerful as they be, R●nna●●d●. to the terror of all the straits, and many times they take purchase in the main Ocean, yea sometimes even in the narrow Seas in England, and those are the most cruel villains in Turkey, or Barbary; whose natives are very noble, and of good natures, in comparison of them. Advertisement for wild heads. To conclude, the misery of a Pirate (although many are as sufficient Seamen as any) yet in regard of his superfluity, you shall find it such, that any wise man would rather live amongst wild beasts, than them; therefore let all unadvised persons take heed, how they entertain that quality; and I could wish Merchants, Gentlemen, and all setters forth of ships, not to be sparing of a competent pay, nor true payment; for neither Sould●ers nor Seamen can live without means, but necessity will force them to steal; and when they are once entered into that trade, they are hardly reclaimed. Those titles of Seamen and Soldiers, have been most worthily honoured and esteemed, but now regarded for most part, but as the scum of the world; regain therefore your wont reputations, and endeavour rather to adventure to those fair plantations of our English Nation; which however in the beginning were scorned and contemned, yet now you see how many rich and gallant people come from thence, who went thither as poor as any Soldier or Sailer, and gets more in one year, than you by piracy in seven. I entreat you therefore to consider, how many thousands yearly go thither; also how many Ships and Sailors are employed to transport them, and what custom they yearly pay to our most Royal King Charles, whose prosperity and his Kingdoms good, I humbly beseech the immortal God ever to preserve and increase. FINIS. Part of the Travels of Capt JOHN SMITH amongst TURKS, TARTARS and others extracted out of the HISTORY by JOHN pain Capt. SMITH thrown into the Sea, got safe to Shoree, and was relieved Chap 2 How he relieved OLUMPAGH by a stratagem of Lights Chap. 4 The Siege of REGAL in Transiluania Chap. 7 His three single Combats Chap. 7. His Encounter with TURBASHAW Chap. 7. His Combat with GRVALGO. Capt of three hundred horsemen. Chap. 7. How he slew BONNY: MULGRO. Chap. 7. Capt SMITH led Captive to the BASHAW of NALBRITS in TARTARY. Chap. 12. Three TURKS heads in a banner given him for Arms. Chap. ●. How he was presented to Prince SIGISMUNDUS. Chap. 8. Capt SMITH Killeth the BASHAW of Nalbrits and on his horse escapeth. Chap. 17.